प्रकृतितत्त्व-विचारः / Inquiry into Prakṛti (Nature/Śakti) and Śiva’s Transcendence
कदाचित्कुशपुष्पाणि समिधं नयति स्वयम् । सखीभ्यां स्थानसंस्कारं कुर्वती न्यवसत्तदा
kadācitkuśapuṣpāṇi samidhaṃ nayati svayam | sakhībhyāṃ sthānasaṃskāraṃ kurvatī nyavasattadā
کبھی وہ خود کُش کے پھول اور سَمِدھا لے آتی۔ پھر دو سہیلیوں کے ساتھ مل کر جگہ کا سنسکار (تقدیس) کروا کے وہیں بیٹھ جاتی۔
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Sthala Purana: Not a Jyotirliṅga narrative; it depicts āśrama-ritual logistics—gathering kuśa and samidh and performing sthāna-saṃskāra (site consecration).
Significance: Highlights that even preparatory acts (collecting samidh, purifying the site) are bhakti when done for Śiva; reinforces the Siddhānta stress on kriyā (right ritual action) supporting yoga and jñāna.
Shakti Form: Pārvatī
Role: nurturing
Offering: dhupa
It highlights Parvati’s humble, hands-on devotion: true bhakti is shown by personally gathering sacred materials and carefully consecrating the place of worship, making the mind and environment fit for Shiva’s grace.
The verse emphasizes practical upacāra—preparing a pure seat and bringing offerings—typical of Saguna Shiva worship, where the devotee serves Shiva through orderly ritual and reverence, often centered on the Linga.
Prepare a clean, sanctified worship space (sthāna-saṃskāra), offer samidh/kuśa in a simple rite, and perform japa with steady attention—ideally with the Panchākṣarī mantra, “Om Namaḥ Śivāya.”