Satyavrata, Vasiṣṭha, and the Crisis of Dharma: Protection, Anger, and Vow-Discipline
पाणिग्रहणमंत्राणां निष्ठा स्यात्सप्तमे पदे । न च सत्यव्रतस्थस्य तमुपांशुमबुद्ध्यत
pāṇigrahaṇamaṃtrāṇāṃ niṣṭhā syātsaptame pade | na ca satyavratasthasya tamupāṃśumabuddhyata
Los mantras del rito de tomar la mano (matrimonio) alcanzan su firme consumación en el séptimo paso. Pero quien está establecido en el voto de la verdad no debe recitar ese mantra en susurro, ni repetirlo sin clara conciencia.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Shiva Purana teachings to the sages, with the Uma Samhita’s dharmic-yogic framing)
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Dakṣiṇāmūrti
Significance: Connects dharma of saṃskāra (saptapadī completion) with truthfulness and conscious utterance; stresses that ritual speech must be aligned with awareness to avoid binding error.
Shakti Form: Pārvatī
Role: nurturing
It teaches that sacred rites mature through conscious completion (the seventh step) and that truthfulness requires clarity and integrity in mantra—speech must be aligned with awareness, not mechanical or careless.
Shaiva discipline treats mantra as a living link to Saguna Shiva’s grace; performing rites with truthful, attentive speech mirrors the inner purity required for Linga-worship and for approaching Shiva as Pati (Lord) through right conduct.
Maintain satya-vrata (truthfulness) and recite mantras with clear attention (buddhi) and proper audibility as prescribed—avoid inattentive whispering; apply the same mindful discipline in Shiva-mantra japa such as the Panchakshara.