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From Ananda Lahari
by Adiguru Shankaracharya
It is a living tradition still, in most of the world's religions, to
make offerings to one's deity in the form of food. This most probably
had its origins in simple harvest sacrifices in gratitude to nature spirits
for a good crop. However, it soon reached very sophisticated expression
in such rituals as the Christian communion, where bread and wine are transformed
into the ultimate offering - the flesh and blood of Christ himself. Man
is no longer surrendering just food, but the very body that is constituted
from food and the consciousness that it houses.
Tantra has long been renowned for its ceremonial use of food as a practical
aid to inducing higher states of consciousness. Most famous, or infamous,
is the panchatattva ritual. This sadhana is designed to enable the sadhak
to break the bonds of sensuality by controlled indulgence in sensually
stimulating food - meat, fish, grain - and alcohol, inducing a state of
hypersensitivity to the union with Shakti which enables him to break through
the boundaries of his normal consciousness. However, there are other tantric
rituals that require the practitioner to prepare special foods, and partake
of them as consecrated offerings to the supreme power of the universe,
Shakti.
Tantric practices were, and still are, handed down by word of mouth from
guru to disciple. Where the shastras have been recorded in written form,
the esoteric aspects of the teaching are veiled in an elaborate verbal
and symbolic code that is only known to initiates. Thus the more powerful
practices are protected from misunderstanding and misuse. Ananda Lahari
(Waves of Bliss), by Adiguru Shankaracharya, is such a text. It is often
called the sixty - fifth tantra (traditionally the number is sixty-four)
because its poetic praises of Shakti and Shiva actually encode a series
of practical techniques that constitute particular tantric sadhanas. These
practices incorporate the use of mantra, yantra and ritual food offerings;
they are highly specific and may be used both for worldly ends and for
spiritual attainment. The sloka presented here is just one of many, chosen
to give you a brief taste, an intimation of the favour of lesser known
tantric rituals.
Sloka 41
Tavajnachakrastham tapanashashikotidyutidharam
Param shambhum vande parimilitaparshvam parachita
Yamaradhyanbhaktya ravishashishuchinamavisaye
Niralokealoke nivasati hi bhalokabhavane.
I prostrate to Paramshiva who resides in the ajna chakra, who illumines
like hundreds of thousands of suns and moons, and who is embraced by
Chitshakti. He who meditates on this form with full and pure devotion
will achieve the same state of consciousness where no other light is
required, the state which is beyond the realm of sun, moon and fire.
Yantra

Draw a circle and write the mantra inside it in three lines as follows:
dum tha
dum sa
dum sha
Sadhana
Do 1000 japa every day for forty-five days. Engrave the yantra on a gold
plate. Offer honey and urad bread to the Devi.
Or
Do 1000 japa for twenty-five days. Engrave the yantra on a gold plate.
Perform the worship in front of a jar filled with water. Offer cooked
rice mixed with chillies to the Devi.
Benefits
The strict performance of either of these ceremonies will bring the sadhak
the ability to remove incurable diseases.
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