The Classification and Explanation of Yakṣiṇī Mantras
Kālī and Tārā Vidyās
सांगुष्ठानिश्चुतुर्वारं महाशंखस्थिते जले । खंरेफमनुबिंद्वाढ्यां भृगुमन्विंदुयुक्तया ॥ १०७ ॥
sāṃguṣṭhāniścuturvāraṃ mahāśaṃkhasthite jale | khaṃrephamanubiṃdvāḍhyāṃ bhṛgumanviṃduyuktayā || 107 ||
Quatro vezes, com o polegar, deve-se aspergir (ou tocar para santificar) a água guardada numa grande concha. Em seguida, emprega-se a sílaba “kha” junto com “repha” (ra), dotada de anusvāra e bindu; e a sílaba “bhṛgu” (bha) unida a um bindu.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It teaches a precise purification step: sanctifying conch-held water through controlled touch (thumb) and encoded bija-syllables, indicating that spiritual efficacy in ritual depends on correct mantra-phonetics and procedure.
Bhakti here is practiced as disciplined worship: the devotee prepares sacred water through mantra and purity, treating the act as a devotional offering where accuracy (śuddhi) supports heartfelt Vishnu-upasana.
Śikṣā (Vedic phonetics) is emphasized—use of bindu/anusvāra markers and specific consonant naming (repha, bhṛgu-letter) shows how sound-precision and syllable-formation are integral to mantra application.