Naimiṣa-kṣetra-prādurbhāva and Jāpyeśvara-māhātmya — Nandī’s Birth, Japa, and Consecration
उक्त्वा मनोमयं चक्रं स सृष्ट्वा तानुवाच ह / क्षिप्तमेतन्मया चक्रमनुव्रजत मा चिरम् / यत्रास्य नेमिः शीर्येत स देशः पुरुषर्षभाः
uktvā manomayaṃ cakraṃ sa sṛṣṭvā tānuvāca ha / kṣiptametanmayā cakramanuvrajata mā ciram / yatrāsya nemiḥ śīryeta sa deśaḥ puruṣarṣabhāḥ
Nói xong như vậy, Ngài tạo ra một luân (cakra) do tâm hóa (manomaya) và bảo họ: “Ta đã phóng luân này—hãy theo ngay, chớ chậm trễ. Nơi nào vành luân (nemi) của nó mòn rã hay gãy vỡ, nơi ấy chính là miền đất cần tìm, hỡi những bậc trượng phu tối thượng.”
A divine guide/royal sage figure directing the seekers (contextual narrator of the Kurma Purana’s pilgrimage-geography episode)
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
By describing a “mind-made” (manomaya) discus that becomes an effective divine instrument, the verse hints at the Purāṇic idea that higher will/consciousness can project form and function—suggesting the primacy of consciousness behind manifest guidance.
No explicit āsana or meditation technique is taught here; instead, the verse emphasizes disciplined immediacy and single-pointed pursuit—“follow without delay”—a practical yogic attitude of ekāgratā (focused adherence) in executing a divinely given directive.
This specific verse is not explicitly sectarian; it presents divine guidance through a sacred sign. In the Kurma Purana’s broader Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis, such guidance is typically read as the unified will of Īśvara directing seekers toward dharma and tīrtha.