Adhyaya 34: भस्ममहात्म्यं—अग्नीषोमात्मक-शिवतत्त्वं तथा पाशुपतव्रतप्रशंसा
भस्मस्नानविशुद्धात्मा जितक्रोधो जितेन्द्रियः मत्समीपं समागम्य न भूयो विनिवर्तते
bhasmasnānaviśuddhātmā jitakrodho jitendriyaḥ matsamīpaṃ samāgamya na bhūyo vinivartate
من تطهّر باطنه بحمّام الرماد المقدّس، وغلب الغضب وضبط الحواس—إذا دنا منّي—لا يعود ثانيةً (إلى القيد والتيه المتكرر).
Shiva (within Suta’s narration to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It links external Shaiva observance (bhasma-snana) with inner transformation—anger-control and sense-mastery—presenting Linga-centered practice as a complete path from ritual purity to liberation.
Shiva is presented as Pati—the liberating Lord whose proximity signifies release from pasha; approaching Him is not mere physical nearness but attainment of His grace and state, resulting in non-return to bondage.
Bhasma-snana (application/bath of sacred ash) combined with Pashupata-style yama-like disciplines: conquering krodha (anger) and jita-indriya (sense-restraint), culminating in steadfast orientation to Shiva.