Standing precariously balanced with her right leg raised she supports her awesome frame on her left leg, under which she tramples Kamadeva, the god of desire.
She is four-armed, and holds various symbolic attributes in her hands. With two of her main arms she holds an arrow, stretched on a flower bow. The shaft of this arrow is made of flowers, the flight is made of leaves, and it is tipped by a red utpala flower.
Her upper left hand holds a flower-hook, and the final right hand holds a flower-noose.
The Goddess Kurukulla is invoked for the controlling activities of subjugating, magnetising, and attracting. She is extremely seductive: her red color and subjugating flower-attributes emphasise her more mundane activity of enchanting men and women, ministers and kings, through the bewitching power of physical desire and love (Skt. vashikarana). The eroticism of her symbolism is further enhanced through the imagery described in her sadhana. For attracting or subjugating a man, the flower-hook and red utpala arrow are visualised as piercing his heart; and for attracting a woman these attributes are visualised as penetrating her generative organ.
From a red eight-petalled lotus at the practitioner's heart arise eight red bees, which are visualised as flying out from his nostril and entering the nostril of the person to be subjugated. Here they suck the vowel syllables from that persons heart with their 'pollen gathering sucking tubes', then return with their 'nectar' to their 'hive' in the practitioners heart. The symbolism of red bees intoxicated with honey, of red utpala flowers laden with fragrant nectar, and of the snaring, hooking, and piercing activities of Kurukulla's flower-attributes, reveal the magnetism of this seductive goddess.
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