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
আমি আমার নিজ ধাম—শিবলোক—এ প্রত্যাবর্তন করলাম; শিবও তাঁর দিব্য অবস্থায় গমন করলেন। তখন সর্বত্র পরম সুস্থতা লাভ হল, আর সব উপদ্রব দূরে সরে গেল।
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).