Yogamaya is regarded to be the embodiment of either the internal or the external potency of Vishnu, or his avatar of Krishna, in
Vaishnavism. The goddess, also referred to as
Vaishnavi Mahamaya, assumes a number of manifestations like
Durga, Ambika, Kshemada, and
Bhadrakali, according to the
Vishnu Purana. In the Bhagavata Purana, the asura
Hiranyaksha mocks
Varaha and references Vishnu's
Yogamaya: According to a 17th century literary poem called the
Mukundavilasa, when
Bhudevi and
Brahma petition Vishnu to intervene in earthly affairs due to the oppression of
Kamsa and
Shishupala, he recruits a number of deities to assist him in his Krishna avatar:
Lakshmi is to be born as
Rukmini, Bhudevi is to manifest as
Satyabhama,
Shesha is to incarnate as
Balarama, and Yogamaya is tasked to be born as the
daughter of
Yashoda. In the narratives of Krishna, the deity employs the phenomenon of
Yogamaya in order to spend time with the cowherd women of
Gokulam, the
gopis. During his blissful dalliance with the gopis, it is Yogamaya who creates spiritual doppelgangers of each gopi at their houses so that they can also act as chaste wives to their husbands, while also dwelling on the deity. In the
Bhagavad Gita, when
Arjuna wonders why Krishna's pastimes and true form are not visible to mortals, he responds by stating that his manifestations are not visible to all men, and that he is veiled by his illusory potency. When the
asura Jalandhara wages a war against
Shiva to abduct
Parvati, Vishnu employs Yogamaya as an illusory form to break the chastity of the asura's wife,
Vrinda. This allows Shiva to prevail in his war. Due to Yogamaya's service to Vishnu, the deity offers her the occasion of
Ekadashi (the eleventh day of every month) for veneration in her honour. ==Temples==