Ganapati Puja
Begin auspiciously · Remove obstacles · Mūlādhāra grounding
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Ganesha, lord of the Mūlādhāra and personification of “Om,” is invoked first so mantras gain siddhi and the ceremony proceeds nirvighnam (without hurdles).
From muhurtam to pujari to samagri, we manage it all, while you receive blessings without distractions
From muhurtam guidance to pujari and samagri, we handle the end-to-end ceremony—so your family can focus on receiving blessings.
Begin auspiciously · Remove obstacles · Mūlādhāra grounding
Ganesha, lord of the Mūlādhāra and personification of “Om,” is invoked first so mantras gain siddhi and the ceremony proceeds nirvighnam (without hurdles).
Kalasha mantras · Space purification · Family sanctification
With kalasha and Vedic recitation, purity and auspiciousness are invoked for people, place, water, materials, and actions—preparing the home for the main rites.
Welcome life · Bless lineage · Invoke protection
Traditional prayers recognizing the child’s birth, seeking strength, health, and clarity. Often recited briefly within the panayanam sequence to honor origins before initiation.
Sacred naming · Identity blessing · Auspicious roll-call
Rice plate is inscribed using a gold ring with darbha; māsa, nakshatra, and vyavahārika names are contemplated. The chosen name is softly recited in the child’s ear with mantras.
First grain · Nourish body · Cultivate sattva
Simple feeding rite introducing Anna (cooked rice) with prayers to refine taste, discipline, and gratitude. Customarily performed before scholastic initiation in some families.
Seed sprouting · Growth intent · Fresh beginnings
Symbolic sowing to invoke steady growth in learning and character. The sprout represents disciplined effort maturing into wisdom.
Remove impurities · Renew mind · Fresh discipline
First hair removal/tonsure (if your family tradition observes it with Upanayanam). Emphasizes shedding old impressions and committing to a cleaner, disciplined life.
Auspicious adornment · Tradition mark · Blessings
Ear stud/ornament ceremony as per regional custom, performed with short mantras and family blessings (optional; included if your tradition observes it).
Clean shave · Ritual purity · Fresh resolve
Ritual shaving (distinct from or alongside Choulam as per sampradāya) to signify purity and readiness for brahmacharya discipline.
Tuft setting · Discipline vow · Vedic identity
Traditional setting of hair tufts where observed; symbolizes focus of prāṇa and commitment to study and conduct.
Formal intent · Vow to learn · Guru guidance
The family states intention and details before the devatās. Yajamāna accepts duties of brahmacharya under a guru’s guidance.
Sacred thread · Duty embrace · Daily discipline
Wearing the yajnopavīta across the shoulder with prescribed mantras. Marks eligibility for certain Vedic practices and responsibilities.
Simple food · Satvik habit · Mind steadiness
Sweet union · Resolve strength · Auspicious start
A small sweetness ritual (where observed) marking harmony and firmness of resolve; regional custom varies—performed when appropriate.
Gayatri teaching · Japa method · Daily nitya
The guru imparts Gayatri and method of sandhyāvandanam. This is the heart of Upanayanam—beginning of daily japa and self-discipline.
Offer prayers · Clarity fire · Inner purification
Short fire rites as per tradition to internalize vows, offering oblations with mantras to cultivate clarity and steadfastness.
Seek alms · Humility lesson · Gratitude
The initiate seeks symbolic alms from elders, learning humility, respect for food, and value of study supported by society.
Light offering · Auspicious close · Share prasadam
Final āratī to the deities and guru; the family receives blessings and shares prasadam in a spirit of joy and gratitude.
Final blessings · Mantra benediction
The pujari’s concluding blessings—rooted in daily sadhana and recitation—are offered for the family’s wellbeing and the home’s auspicious start.
This list adapts to your family tradition—final kit confirmed after booking.
Mantra • Dravya • Mana — purity in every step.
Qualified, devoted pujaris—precision in every mantra.
Eco-friendly, natural samagri—no plastic, no impurities.
Short video primers so your family participates with awareness and joy.
From enquiry to blessings, here’s exactly what happens—summarized in chat.
Yes. Share preferred dates and city; we’ll suggest 2–3 auspicious slots and confirm one with you.
Yes. We bring the core puja materials. You may keep fruits/sweets/prasadam items as per family tradition. Final kit is confirmed on the pre-puja call.
Telangana & Andhra Pradesh (e.g., Hyderabad, Warangal, Vizag, Vijayawada, Guntur, Tirupati, etc.). Service is in Telugu by default.
A verified Telugu pujari near you—experienced, ID-verified, and briefed on your family’s requirements.
Yes. We use a compact setup and follow society rules.
Clean space, a small table/peetam, water, seating for family, and prasadam ingredients if you prefer homemade. We’ll send a WhatsApp checklist.
Choose Advance (deposit) to lock your date or Pay in full. For Advance, the balance is paid after the ceremony (UPI/cash receipt).
Free reschedule up to 48h before the puja. Cancellations: configurable—e.g., refundable minus small fee ≥72h; within 72h non-refundable.
Puja is in Telugu. Basic explanations in Telugu (and brief English/Hindi on request). Photos/video are fine outside key mantra moments—ask the pujari.
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