Adhyaya 73 — त्रिपुरदाहे ब्रह्मस्तवः
Brahmā’s Hymn in the Context of Tripura’s Burning
वायुर्भस्मेति च व्योम तथाम्भः पृथिवी तथा त्रियायुषं त्रिसंध्यं च धूलयेद् भसितेन यः
vāyurbhasmeti ca vyoma tathāmbhaḥ pṛthivī tathā triyāyuṣaṃ trisaṃdhyaṃ ca dhūlayed bhasitena yaḥ
Quien se unge con la ceniza sagrada—contemplándola como Vāyu (viento), como Vyoma (espacio), como Ambhas (agua) y como Pṛthivī (tierra)—y realiza esta aplicación en las tres sandhyās, alcanza una vida de triple medida y queda purificado por la observancia Pāśupata.
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva’s bhasma-vidhi within the Purva-Bhaga discourse)
It links Linga-oriented Shaiva practice to bhasma-dhāraṇa: ash is not mere decoration but a purificatory, vow-based act performed at the three sandhyās as part of disciplined worship of Pati (Shiva).
By meditating on ash as the elemental field (wind, space, water, earth), the practitioner recognizes all tattvas as pervaded and transcended by Pati—Shiva—while the pashu (bound soul) moves from pasha (bondage) toward purification.
Bhasma-dhāraṇa at the three sandhyās with bhāvanā (contemplation) of the elements—an outer rite supporting inner Pāśupata discipline (yoga of purification and detachment).