तुलसी-शङ्खचूडोपाख्यानम् — Viṣṇu’s Disguise and the Tulasī Episode
Prelude to Śaṅkhacūḍa’s Fall
मयागतं स्वभवनं शिवलोकं शिवो गतः । सर्वस्वास्थ्यमतीवाप दूरीभूतो ह्युपद्रवः
mayāgataṃ svabhavanaṃ śivalokaṃ śivo gataḥ | sarvasvāsthyamatīvāpa dūrībhūto hyupadravaḥ
لمّا عدتُ إلى مسكني الخاص—عالم شيفا المبارك—عاد شيفا أيضًا إلى حالته الإلهية. حينئذٍ تحقّقت العافية التامّة من كل وجه، وطُردت كلّ الاضطرابات والمحن إلى بعيد.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Role: liberating
The verse highlights Śiva as the supreme auspicious refuge (Pati): reaching His realm/state brings sarva-svāsthya (inner wholeness) and causes upadrava (bondage-born distress) to fall away—an image of grace culminating in peace and liberation.
Śivaloka here points to communion with Śiva’s auspicious presence; in practice, devotees approach this through Saguna worship—especially Śiva-liṅga pūjā—where the visible form becomes the doorway to experiencing Śiva’s protecting and liberating grace.
A practical takeaway is steady Śiva-japa (especially the Pañcākṣarī, “Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) alongside liṅga-abhiṣeka; this is traditionally held to foster svāsthya (steadiness and well-being) and reduce upadrava (mental and karmic disturbances).