Skip to content

Ashtakshara · Mantra

Narasimha Ashtakshara

Vaishnava sampradaya

ॐ नमो नारसिंहाय

IAST

om namo na:rasimha:ya

Telugu

ఓం నమో నారసింహాయ

Meaning

Eight-syllabled salutation: 'Om — salutations to Narasimha.' The mainstream japa-mantra, suitable for all aspirants without formal initiation.

How to use

108 or 1008 repetitions daily; recommended at twilight (sandhya) for protection.

Notes · scriptural context, prerequisites, phalas

The eight-syllabled namah-mantra of Narasimha — om namo na:rasimha:ya — parallels the eight-syllabled Na:ra:yana mantra (om namo na:ra:yana:ya) and is regarded across Sri: Vaishnava and Madhva sampradayas as the principal japa-mantra for the avatara. Unlike many Pancharatra mantras it carries no formal restriction: the namah-prefix and the terminal dative declension make it a salutation rather than a power-mantra (mantra-prayoga), so any sincere aspirant — initiated or not — may chant it. The standard discipline is 108 repetitions at each of the three sandhyas, or a single round of 1008 at dawn. Tradition recommends chanting before leaving the home, before travel through unfamiliar territory, before medical treatment, and before any decisive action of the day. Pancharatra commentaries describe its phalas as bhaya-na:sa (fear-removal), graha-pi:da:-niva:rana (relief from astrological afflictions), and the kindling of bhakti where bhakti has cooled. It is the mantra most often given by acharyas at the time of ba:la:mukha-samska:ra — the child's first formal introduction to japa. Recitation may be silent (ma:nasika), whispered (upa:msu), or audible (va:chika); silent is highest. No fasting prerequisite. A tulasi or sphatika mala is preferred; counting on the finger-joints is also taught. Pair it with the daily morning bath and offer the closing repetitions to one's ishta-dhevatha:.

Join our community