Chapter 370: नरकनिरूपणम्
Naraka-nirūpaṇa) — Description of Hell (with the physiology of dying and the subtle transition
अधः पायुरुपस्थञ्च अनेनाशुभकारिणां पिण्डं कृत्वा तुव्न्यसेदिति ञ मूर्धानं योगिनो भित्त्वा जीवो यात्यथ चेच्छया
adhaḥ pāyurupasthañca anenāśubhakāriṇāṃ piṇḍaṃ kṛtvā tuvnyasediti ña mūrdhānaṃ yogino bhittvā jīvo yātyatha cecchayā
نیچے—پایو اور اُپستھ کے راستے سے—جیو نکلتا ہے؛ اسی راہ سے اشوبھ کرم کرنے والے کرم کے میل سے بندھ کر گویا ‘پِنڈ’ بن کر چلے جاتے ہیں۔ مگر یوگی سر کے برہمرَندھر کو چیر کر اپنی مرضی سے جیو کو روانہ کرتا ہے۔
Lord Agni (traditional Agni Purana narrator) addressing the sage Vasiṣṭha
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Yoga / Tantra","secondary_vidya":"Philosophy","practical_application":"Guidance for yogic utkrānti (conscious exit) via brahma-randhra and warning about lower exits associated with tamasic/adharmic karma.","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Description","entry_title":"Utkramana-mārga: Adho-mārga vs Brahma-randhra-bheda","lookup_keywords":["utkrānti","brahma-randhra","pāyu-upastha-mārga","yoginī-mṛtyu","gati-bheda"],"quick_summary":"The text contrasts involuntary lower exits (pāyu/upastha) linked with inauspicious karma versus the yogin’s deliberate exit through the cranial aperture (brahma-randhra) by yogic mastery."}
Concept: Gati (post-mortem trajectory) is shaped by karma, while yogic siddhi enables icchā-mṛtyu/utkrānti through brahma-randhra.
Application: Cultivate prāṇa-control and upward current (udāna) with disciplined yoga so that death is met with clarity and an upward exit rather than a compulsive lower discharge.
Khanda Section: Yoga / Tantra (Prāṇa-uttara-mārga; subtle-body exit and yogic procedure)
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A contrast scene: a bound, darkened jīva exiting downward through the lower apertures versus a luminous yogin seated in meditation with a radiant opening at the crown (brahma-randhra) and the jīva rising upward.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala temple mural style, seated yogin in padmāsana, subtle suṣumṇā channel glowing, crown aperture emitting a small luminous jīva, subdued lower-body shadows indicating adho-mārga, earthy reds and ochres, stylized lotus motifs","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting, central yogin with gold-leaf halo and ornate crown-radiance at brahma-randhra, small ascending jīva rendered as a golden flame, lower exit path shown as dark cloud at the base, rich jewelry-like detailing and embossed gold work","mysore_prompt":"Mysore painting, instructional diagrammatic feel: yogin posture, highlighted crown point, arrows indicating upward exit, side vignette showing downward exit for pāpa-karmī, clean lines, muted palette with precise annotations","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature, split-panel composition: left—tamasic figure with heavy dark aura and downward drift; right—ascetic yogin with fine linework, delicate flame-like jīva rising from crown, architectural border and floral margins"}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"contemplative","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"medium","voice_tone":"instructional"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: pāyurupasthañca → pāyuḥ upastham ca; anenāśubhakāriṇāṃ → anena aśubhakāriṇām; tuvnyasediti → tu nyaset iti; yogino → yoginaḥ (gen. sg.); yātyatha → yāti atha; cecchayā → ca icchayā. The token “ña” appears as a textual/edition artifact.
Related Themes: Agni Purana 370 (utkrānti, prāṇa, antaḥkāla-smṛti)
It distinguishes inauspicious downward exits (through pāyu/upastha) from the yogic technique of exiting through the crown (mūrdhan/brahma-randhra) by deliberate control.
It adds yogic–tantric subtle-body doctrine (utkrānti, karmic exit-paths, brahma-randhra) alongside the Purana’s broader coverage of ritual, dharma, and spiritual disciplines.
Downward exit is linked with inauspicious karma and constrained rebirth, whereas crown-exit under yogic mastery is portrayed as a higher, will-directed departure associated with liberation-oriented attainment.