भस्म-प्रकार-त्रिपुण्ड्र-धारण-विधिः
Types of Bhasma and the Method of Wearing Tripuṇḍra
न तदूनं न तद्ध्यानं न तद्दानं जपो न सः । त्रिपुंड्रेण विनायेन विप्रेण यदनुष्ठितम्
na tadūnaṃ na taddhyānaṃ na taddānaṃ japo na saḥ | tripuṃḍreṇa vināyena vipreṇa yadanuṣṭhitam
สิ่งใดที่พราหมณ์ปฏิบัติโดยไม่สวมตรีปุณฑระ สิ่งนั้นไม่ใช่วรตแท้ ไม่ใช่ฌาน; ไม่ใช่ทาน และไม่ใช่ชปะ.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Īśāna
Sthala Purana: Not a site-legend; it is a dharma-vidhi statement: without tripuṇḍra (Śiva’s ash-mark), religious acts lack their intended Śaiva orientation.
Significance: Reframes ‘authenticity’ of vrata/dhyāna/dāna/japa as requiring Śiva-sambandha (visible sign of belonging), not merely external performance.
The verse asserts that Shaiva identity and consecration through Tripuṇḍra (bhasma) is not merely external—without it, spiritual acts lack the intended Śiva-sambandha (connection to Śiva) and thus lose their full sanctifying power.
Tripuṇḍra is a primary Shaiva emblem used when approaching Saguna Śiva worship, especially Liṅga-pūjā; it marks the body as dedicated to Śiva and aligns the worshipper with Śiva’s rite and discipline.
Adopt Tripuṇḍra with sacred ash (bhasma) before japa, dāna, and dhyāna—performing worship as a Śiva-rite, typically alongside Śiva-mantra practice such as the Pañcākṣarī ("Om Namaḥ Śivāya").