The Description of the Four Durgā Mantras
शांतिः पुष्टिः पुनस्तुष्टिमार्तगंपदशेखरा । मूलमन्त्रं पृथङ्न्यस्येन्निजमूर्द्धनि मन्त्रवित् ॥ १२० ॥
śāṃtiḥ puṣṭiḥ punastuṣṭimārtagaṃpadaśekharā | mūlamantraṃ pṛthaṅnyasyennijamūrddhani mantravit || 120 ||
Après avoir invoqué Śānti (Paix), Puṣṭi (Nourrissement) et de nouveau Tuṣṭi (Contentement)—couronnées par la demeure suprême—le connaisseur des mantras doit placer séparément, par nyāsa, le mantra-racine sur sa propre tête.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a technical/ritual context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It teaches that mantra-practice is not merely recitation: through nyāsa the sādhaka ritually installs the root-mantra in the body, beginning with the head, aligning mind and consciousness with peace, nourishment, and inner contentment.
By emphasizing disciplined mantra-upāsanā—placing the deity’s root-mantra with awareness—devotion becomes embodied and steady, producing śānti (calm), puṣṭi (spiritual strength), and tuṣṭi (satisfaction) that support sustained bhakti.
Ritual technique: nyāsa (mantra-installation on specific body parts). This reflects the applied, procedural side of Vedic practice preserved in Narada Purana’s technical sections.