यक्षेश्वरावतारः (Yakṣeśvara-Avatāra) and the Nīlakaṇṭha Paradigm in the Churning of the Ocean
गर्व्वमेनं न कुरुत कर्त्ता हर्त्ताऽपरः प्रभुः । विस्मृताश्च महेशानं कथयध्वम्वृथाबलाः
garvvamenaṃ na kuruta karttā harttā'paraḥ prabhuḥ | vismṛtāśca maheśānaṃ kathayadhvamvṛthābalāḥ
لا تُضمروا هذا الكِبر. فالربُّ الحقّ—غيركم—هو الفاعل وهو القابض لكلِّ شيء. إذ نسيتم ماهيشانا تكلّمتم كأنكم ذوو بأس؛ فقوّتكم باطلة لا ثمرة لها.
Lord Shiva (Maheshana), admonishing proud beings (likely devas/asuras) within the Shatarudra narrative context
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Īśāna
Significance: Contemplation of Mahēśvara as kartā-hartā dissolves ahaṅkāra and aligns the soul (paśu) toward Śiva’s grace (anugraha).
Role: liberating
It teaches that ego is a spiritual obstacle: all agency ultimately belongs to Maheshana (Shiva), and pride that forgets Him becomes powerless and fruitless.
Linga-worship trains the devotee to remember Shiva as the supreme Lord (Pati) beyond individual doership; recognizing Him as kartā-hartā transforms worship into surrender rather than self-assertion.
Practice Shiva-smriti through japa of the Panchakshara (Om Namaḥ Śivāya) with a humility-vow, offering actions and results to Shiva to reduce pride and strengthen devotion.