The opening chapters set a distinctly mythological tone. Mahipati begins not in Maharashtra but in the celestial realms, establishing Lord Dattatreya—the Adi-Guru (original teacher) who merged the trinity of Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva—as the source of the Nath lineage. In Adhyay 1, we witness the cosmic play ( lila ) where Dattatreya, pleased with the intense penance of a seeker, imparts the secret of siddha-yoga . This establishes the key theme:
Introduction: The Oral Chronicle of the Nine Saints navnath bhaktisar 1 to 40 adhyay
Adhyays 30–35 focus on , the serpent master, and his disciple. Here, Mahipati introduces the concept of kundalini in poetic form—the coiled serpent energy at the base of the spine. Naganath instructs that raising this energy without a guru is like a child playing with a cobra. The graphic descriptions of chakras and nadis are balanced by simple refrains: "Without love, all yoga is mere acrobatics." The opening chapters set a distinctly mythological tone
Adhyay 28 contains the famous curse of . A miserly householder refuses to give him alms; Charpatnath curses the man’s wealth to turn into ashes. When the man repents, the saint restores it, teaching that charity ( dana ) is the foundation of householder spirituality. This aligns Nath doctrine with mainstream Hindu ethics. This establishes the key theme: Introduction: The Oral
The final five chapters of this section serve as a bridge. Adhyay 36 summarizes the nine Naths and their geographic pithas (seats) across India—from Nepal to Maharashtra to Gujarat. Mahipati emphasizes that the true pitha is the human body.