Upamanyu’s Tapas, Shiva’s Indra-Form Test, and the Bestowal of Kshiroda and Gaṇapatya
कदाचित् क्षीरम् अल्पं च पीतवान् मातुलाश्रमे ईर्ष्यया मातुलसुतो ह्य् अपिबत् क्षीरम् उत्तमम्
kadācit kṣīram alpaṃ ca pītavān mātulāśrame īrṣyayā mātulasuto hy apibat kṣīram uttamam
ذات مرة، وهو مقيم في أشرم خاله من جهة الأم، شرب قليلًا من اللبن؛ غير أن ابن الخال، بدافع الحسد، شرب اللبن الأجود كله. وهكذا فإن عقلَ البَشو، المقيَّدَ بپاشا الغيرة، ينصرف عن غذاء الساتّڤا النقيّ ويسقط في شَرَهِ التملّك.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames inner purification as the foundation of liṅga-pūjā: envy (īrṣyā) is a pāśa that makes the mind grasping, so devotion must be accompanied by restraint and sāttvika conduct.
By contrast: Shiva as Pati is the purifier and witness, while envy shows the pashu’s bondage. The verse implies that turning toward Shiva-tattva requires abandoning possessiveness and jealousy.
A practical Pāśupata takeaway: cultivate vairāgya and self-control (indriya-nigraha), replacing envy with contentment—so offerings and daily discipline become inwardly truthful, not merely external.