Puṣkara Sacrifice: Gāyatrī’s Marriage, Sāvitrī’s Wrath, Rudra’s Test, and the Tīrtha-Māhātmya
अरोगा वैद्यनाथे तु महाकाले महेश्वरी । अभया पुष्पतीर्थे तु अमृता विंध्यकंदरे
arogā vaidyanāthe tu mahākāle maheśvarī | abhayā puṣpatīrthe tu amṛtā viṃdhyakaṃdare
Di Vaidyanātha Baginda disebut Arogā; di Mahākāla sebagai Maheśvarī. Di Puṣpa-tīrtha Baginda ialah Abhayā; dan di gua-gua Vindhya Baginda bersemayam sebagai Amṛtā.
Unspecified (narrative listing of the Goddess’s names by sacred locales; likely within the Pulastya–Bhīṣma dialogue frame of Sṛṣṭikhaṇḍa)
Concept: The Divine Mother manifests as health, fearlessness, and nectar-like renewal; sacred sites are therapeutic—spiritually and symbolically—when approached with faith and discipline.
Application: Invoke ‘Arogā’ for health with disciplined habits; ‘Abhayā’ when anxious; treat solitude (caves) as a place for inner detox—replacing fear with remembrance and ethical action.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: tirtha
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A powerful sacred montage: at Vaidyanātha, the Goddess Arogā stands beside a healing shrine, holding herbs and a water-pot as devotees seek relief; at Mahākāla, Maheśvarī appears amid a time-dark temple with a towering liṅga silhouette and swirling incense; at Puṣpa-tīrtha, Abhayā blesses pilgrims under a shower of flowers; deep in Vindhya caves, Amṛtā glows beside crystalline seep-waters, turning the cavern into a womb of renewal. The atmosphere moves from medicine to mystery to fearless blessing to nectar-like stillness.","primary_figures":["Arogā (Goddess of health)","Maheśvarī (at Mahākāla)","Abhayā","Amṛtā","Pilgrims/ascetics"],"setting":"Temple precincts and a deep cave sanctuary; flower-filled tīrtha grove for Puṣpa-tīrtha.","lighting_mood":"temple lamp-lit with incense haze; cave bioluminescent gem-glow; occasional divine radiance","color_palette":["smoky charcoal","saffron orange","flower magenta","emerald moss","silver-white"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: central Maheśvarī at Mahākāla with massive gold-leaf halo and dark temple arch; side scenes show Arogā at Vaidyanātha with embossed gold vessels and herb motifs, Abhayā at Puṣpa-tīrtha with cascading gold-embossed flowers, and Amṛtā in a Vindhya cave with jewel-like highlights; rich reds/greens, gem-studded ornaments, ornate borders with bilva and lotus patterns.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: atmospheric Ujjain temple courtyard with soft smoke, delicate linework for shrine architecture; Puṣpa-tīrtha as a flowering grove with refined botanical detail; Vindhya cave rendered with cool shadows and sparkling mineral accents; gentle yet intense devotional expressions on pilgrims’ faces.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines and saturated pigments; Maheśvarī framed by stylized temple lamps and a liṅga motif; Arogā with herb symbols; Abhayā with raised blessing hand; Amṛtā in a patterned cave backdrop; dominant reds/yellows/greens with black contouring and large expressive eyes.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: central Abhayā blessing within a floral mandala; borders filled with stylized blossoms (Puṣpa-tīrtha), temple lamp motifs (Mahākāla), and cave crystal patterns (Vindhya-kandara); deep indigo cloth, intricate white floral filigree, gold highlights, hanging garlands and bells."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["deep temple bell","low conch","incense crackle","cave echo drip","chanting hum"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: No significant external sandhi; compounds treated as internal samāsa (e.g., वैद्य-नाथ, पुष्प-तीर्थ, विंध्य-कंदर).
It maps devotional practice onto place: the same Devī is praised by different epithets at different holy sites (Vaidyanātha, Mahākāla, Puṣpa-tīrtha, and the Vindhya caves), showing a Purāṇic sacred geography where landscape preserves distinct modes of divine presence.
By teaching name-based remembrance tied to pilgrimage and worship: devotees approach the one Goddess through specific names (Arogā, Maheśvarī, Abhayā, Amṛtā), making devotion concrete through mantra-like epithets and place-centered reverence.
The epithets imply moral and spiritual aims: seeking freedom from affliction (Arogā), honoring divine sovereignty (Maheśvarī), cultivating fearlessness and protection (Abhayā), and aspiring to enduring spiritual vitality (Amṛtā).