Package: pyhoca-gui; Maintainer for pyhoca-gui is X2Go Developers <x2go-dev@lists.x2go.org>; Source for pyhoca-gui is src:pyhoca-gui.
Lord Shiva, as Kameshwara, recorded every syllable in his heart. Then, he turned to his own divine consort, the Goddess Parvati (who is none other than Lalitha herself in a different form), and whispered the sacred hymn into her right ear. Parvati, overwhelmed by its beauty, passed it to Vishnu, who passed it to the sage Hayagriva.
Thus, the story concludes where it began: with the eternal resonance of the Sanskrit verses. To this day, those who chant the Sri Lalitha Sahasranamam with devotion are not just praising a goddess; they are aligning their consciousness with the cosmic vibration from which the hymn first emerged—from the playful, loving, and all-powerful lips of the Divine Mother herself. For those seeking the authentic sound, here is the beginning of the hymn as revealed in the Brahmanda Purana : sri lalitha sahasranamam lyrics sanskrit
When Hayagriva opened his eyes, the Sri Lalitha Sahasranamam was fully formed on his tongue in pristine . Lord Shiva, as Kameshwara, recorded every syllable in
But the Devas, led by Indra, were not merely grateful; they were awestruck. They had witnessed the Goddess ride into battle on the Kameshwari chariot, wielding her bow of sugarcane and arrows of flowers. They had heard the thunderous hum of her Panchadasi mantra. Yet, the essence of her glory, they felt, was too vast for ordinary praise. Thus, the story concludes where it began: with
("The Holy Mother, the Great Empress, the One who sits on the magnificent lion-throne...")
So they approached the great sage Hayagriva—the one with a horse’s head and the mind of a scholar. Hayagriva was an avatar of Lord Vishnu himself, the preserver of knowledge.
The secret of the was this: they were not man-made poetry. They were a stotra (hymn) where the sound itself was the deity. Each of the 1,000 names corresponds to one of the 1,000 petals of the Sahasrara Chakra (the crown chakra) at the top of the spiritual spine.
🔗 View this message in rfc822 format
Lord Shiva, as Kameshwara, recorded every syllable in his heart. Then, he turned to his own divine consort, the Goddess Parvati (who is none other than Lalitha herself in a different form), and whispered the sacred hymn into her right ear. Parvati, overwhelmed by its beauty, passed it to Vishnu, who passed it to the sage Hayagriva.
Thus, the story concludes where it began: with the eternal resonance of the Sanskrit verses. To this day, those who chant the Sri Lalitha Sahasranamam with devotion are not just praising a goddess; they are aligning their consciousness with the cosmic vibration from which the hymn first emerged—from the playful, loving, and all-powerful lips of the Divine Mother herself. For those seeking the authentic sound, here is the beginning of the hymn as revealed in the Brahmanda Purana :
When Hayagriva opened his eyes, the Sri Lalitha Sahasranamam was fully formed on his tongue in pristine .
But the Devas, led by Indra, were not merely grateful; they were awestruck. They had witnessed the Goddess ride into battle on the Kameshwari chariot, wielding her bow of sugarcane and arrows of flowers. They had heard the thunderous hum of her Panchadasi mantra. Yet, the essence of her glory, they felt, was too vast for ordinary praise.
("The Holy Mother, the Great Empress, the One who sits on the magnificent lion-throne...")
So they approached the great sage Hayagriva—the one with a horse’s head and the mind of a scholar. Hayagriva was an avatar of Lord Vishnu himself, the preserver of knowledge.
The secret of the was this: they were not man-made poetry. They were a stotra (hymn) where the sound itself was the deity. Each of the 1,000 names corresponds to one of the 1,000 petals of the Sahasrara Chakra (the crown chakra) at the top of the spiritual spine.
Send a report that this bug log contains spam.
Debbugs is free software and licensed under the terms of the GNU Public License version 2. The current version can be obtained from https://bugs.debian.org/debbugs-source/.
Copyright © 1999 Darren O. Benham, 1997,2003 nCipher Corporation Ltd, 1994-97 Ian Jackson, 2005-2017 Don Armstrong, and many other contributors.