Āhnika-Dharma: Dawn Purification, Sandhyā-Upāsanā, Tarpana, Pañca-Mahāyajñas, and Aśauca Rules
जप्त्वा जलाञ्जलिं दद्याद्भारस्करं प्रति तन्मनाः / प्राक्कूलेषु ततः स्थित्वा दर्भेषु सुसमाहितः
japtvā jalāñjaliṃ dadyādbhāraskaraṃ prati tanmanāḥ / prākkūleṣu tataḥ sthitvā darbheṣu susamāhitaḥ
သတ်မှတ်မန်တရကို ဂျပ်ပြီးနောက်၊ နေမင်း (ဘ္ဟာစ్కရ) ကို စိတ်တည်ကာ ရေတစ်လက်ခုပ်ကို အပူဇာအဖြစ် ဆက်ကပ်ရမည်။ ထို့နောက် အရှေ့ဘက်ကမ်းပေါ်တွင် ရပ်၍ ဒರ್ಭမြက်ပေါ်၌ ထိုင်ကာ စိတ်တည်ငြိမ်စွာ အာရုံစိုက်နေရမည်။
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Arghya to the Sun with focused mind integrates outer offering with inner attention; posture and seat (darbha) support concentration.
Vedantic Theme: Kriyā leading to citta-ekāgratā; the visible Sun as pratīka for inner light (antaryāmin).
Application: After japa, offer water (arghya) mindfully to the Sun; then sit on darbha facing east, keeping spine steady and mind collected.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: riverbank/ghāṭa
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.50.19 (prāṇāyāma and meditation follow this settling)
This verse presents jalāñjali as a mantra-supported, intention-focused offering—performed with attention to the Sun—serving as a purificatory and devotional act that steadies the mind before further rites.
It describes a disciplined ritual posture and orientation (eastern bank, darbha seat, concentrated mind), reflecting the text’s emphasis that correct method and mental focus support the efficacy of śrāddha-related observances.
When performing any prayer or ancestral rite, keep the mind single-pointed, maintain cleanliness, and use a simple, consistent ritual setup (a clean seat and calm posture) to cultivate steadiness and reverence.