Beeja · Mantra
Narasimha Beeja Mantra
Pancharatra Agama tradition
ॐ क्ष्रौं
IAST
om kshraum
Telugu
ఓం క్ష్రౌం
Meaning
The single seed-syllable that holds the entire vibration of the Man-Lion. Kshraum unites the energies of fire (ksha) and protection (raum).
How to use
Recited 108 times during morning sandhya, or as the opening invocation before any longer Narasimha stotra.
Notes · scriptural context, prerequisites, phalas
The single-syllable kshraum is recognised across the Pancharatra Agama (especially the Sankarsana Samhita and the Ahirbudhnya Samhita) as the pure beeja of the Narasimha avatara. Phonetically it is the compound of three forces — ksha (the destructive flame), ra (the fire-element repha:), and au (the upward-rising vowel that gathers the energies of the upper worlds) — sealed by anusva:ra. It is the seed from which every longer Narasimha mantra unfolds; the Mantra Raja Pada Stotra itself is said to be its expansion. Traditionally chanted 108 times at dawn before the morning sandhya, facing east, ideally before a Sudarshana-Narasimha yantra or a salagrama. Chanting at the three sandhyas (dawn, midday, dusk) is recommended for those facing fear, hostile influence, or disease. Pancharatra ritual prescribes it as the first mantra of any nya:sa upon the body — placed at the heart, then the head, then the third-eye. The Ahirbudhnya Samhita lists fifteen phalas (fruits) including dispelling of bhu:tha-graha (possession), removal of visha (poison and toxic relationships), and strengthening of ojas. Formal initiation (mantra-di:ksha:) from a guru is preferred, but the beeja is universally permitted for unintiated devotees who chant it as part of a published stotra. Fasting is not prerequisite; sincerity and ritual purity (a:chamana, clean dress) are sufficient. Women, householders, and children may chant freely.