Navavyūha-pūjāvidhi: Bhūta-śuddhi, Nyāsa, Yogapīṭha, Maṇḍala-racanā, Mudrā-prayoga
कं टं पं शं गरुत्मान्स्याज्जं खं वं च सुदर्शनम् / षं चं फं षं गदादेवी वं लं मं क्षं च शङ्खकम्
kaṃ ṭaṃ paṃ śaṃ garutmānsyājjaṃ khaṃ vaṃ ca sudarśanam / ṣaṃ caṃ phaṃ ṣaṃ gadādevī vaṃ laṃ maṃ kṣaṃ ca śaṅkhakam
‘કં, ટં, પં, શં’—ગરુત્માન (ગરુડ); ‘જં, ખં, વં’—સુદર્શન (ચક્ર); ‘ષં, ચં, ફં, ષં’—ગદા-દેવી; અને ‘વં, લં, મં, ક્ષં’—શંખ ગણાય।
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue with Garuda)
Concept: Bīja-syllables are not mere sounds; they are treated as living presences of Viṣṇu’s powers (śakti) embodied as weapons/attendants.
Vedantic Theme: Śakti-śaktimat relation: the Lord’s powers manifest as functional forms while remaining grounded in the one Īśvara.
Application: For protective japa/nyāsa, place these syllables on the body or in a mandala, visualizing Garuḍa, Sudarśana, Gadā, and Śaṅkha guarding the quarters.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.11.39 (Śrī, Puṣṭikā, Vanamālā, Śrīvatsa bīja-mappings); Garuda Purana 1.11.36 (mantra-forms and avatāras)
This verse shows bīja-syllables as coded divine forms—Garuḍa and Viṣṇu’s weapons—used for protection, focus, and invoking specific śakti in recitation.
Indirectly: it provides a protective, devotional framework (invoking Garuḍa and Viṣṇu’s weapons) that is traditionally used to remove obstacles and fear—supporting spiritual steadiness rather than describing the after-death route itself.
Use the verse as a contemplative key: while chanting, visualize Garuḍa, Sudarśana, Gadā, and Śaṅkha as protective forces, reinforcing discipline, clarity, and devotion in daily practice.