The Nada of the Eternal Current: Pushan and the Dying Flow

A temple priest, Sree Madhavan, observes the seasonal desiccation and spiritual decline of the sacred river at the confluence. When human efforts fail, the divine presence of Pushan intervenes. Instead of merely illuminating the bank, Pushan sings a specific vibrational mantra (*Nada*), which acts like a cosmic memory trigger, reminding the water itself of its source and binding the river's flow forever to the eternal solar rhythm of Surya.

Mythology
Source

Siddhanta Samhita (Local Lore) (The detailed narrative of this specific episode (Madhavan, Anchumoorthi, Pushan’s Nada Cure) is highly localized and falls under the category of specific temple folklore (Sthala Purana) and is not cited in a widely recognized, canonical Puranic text (like the Bhagavata Purana or Vishnu Purana). However, the underlying theological principles—the power of *Nada Brahma*, the connection between cosmic rhythm (Surya's cycle) and life sustenance, and the intervention of divine grace to restore *Dharma*—are foundational concepts found throughout the Vedas and major Agamic texts.)

Sacred Storyen

Moral & Divine Teaching

True sustenance and vitality are not granted by external magic or sacrifice alone, but are maintained by the continuous recognition and remembrance of the fundamental, rhythmic pulse (the Nada) that animates all life and existence.