Om Shri Gurubhyo Namah, Jai Ma Adya, Jai Khyapa Parampara.
31. Kona-Rekhastha-Bhadrastha-Pradesa-Bindu-Pithakaya
The One Whose Sacred Seat (Pitha) is a mystical point on the intersection of the corner-lines of the auspicious quarter.
The thirty-first name, Kona-Rekhastha-Bhadrastha-Pradesa-Bindu-Pithakaya, moves into an explicitly tantric register. Bhairava is praised here not just as a deity with a form, but as one seated in a subtle point of sacred geometry. The name suggests presence concentrated in the most refined center of a consecrated space.
Elaboration
This is one of the more esoteric names in the sequence, drawing on yantra symbolism, sacred space, and subtle spiritual geography.
Sacred Geometry
The opening elements evoke kona and rekha: angles and lines. In tantric practice, these are not merely visual details. The intersections within a yantra mark zones of force, orientation, and concentration. The name suggests that Bhairava is present exactly where this ordered geometry becomes spiritually potent.
The Bindu as Center
The word bindu is central to the meaning. In many traditions, the bindu is the point from which manifestation emerges and into which it resolves. It is both infinitesimal and all-containing. To say Bhairava's seat lies there is to place him at the core of manifestation rather than only at its outer forms.
Pitha as Sacred Seat
The term pitha means seat, foundation, or consecrated place of presence. Joined with the bindu, it suggests not a broad territory but an exact center of access. Bhairava is approached here through subtlety, precision, and inward concentration.
A Spiritual Reading
For the seeker, Kona-Rekhastha-Bhadrastha-Pradesa-Bindu-Pithakaya teaches that the divine can be encountered not only in grand outer symbols, but in the still center where all lines meet. Bhairava abides in the concentrated heart of sacred awareness.
Spiritual Insight
Contemplating Kona-Rekhastha-Bhadrastha-Pradesa-Bindu-Pithakaya reminds the seeker that Bhairava is found in the exact center of spiritual concentration. Sacred geometry becomes living presence when the mind turns inward enough to perceive it.