Upamanyu’s Tapas, Shiva’s Indra-Form Test, and the Bestowal of Kshiroda and Gaṇapatya
चिराद्वा ह्यचिराद्वापि क्षीरोदं साधयाम्यहम् सूत उवाच तां प्रणम्यैवमुक्त्वा स तपः कर्तुं प्रचक्रमे
cirādvā hyacirādvāpi kṣīrodaṃ sādhayāmyaham sūta uvāca tāṃ praṇamyaivamuktvā sa tapaḥ kartuṃ pracakrame
„Ob nach langer Zeit oder auch bald: Ich werde den Kṣīroda, den Milchozean, vollenden.“ Sūta sprach: Nachdem er sich vor ihr verneigt und so gesprochen hatte, begann er, Tapas—heilige Askese—zu üben.
Suta (narrator); the first sentence is spoken by an unnamed male character addressing a female figure (tām).
It highlights that attainment of sacred goals is grounded in tapas—disciplined sadhana—which in Shaiva practice supports inner purification before approaching Linga-upasana and its fruits.
Indirectly, it reflects the Shaiva Siddhanta principle that the pashu (individual) must engage in purifying discipline to loosen pasha (bondage), while ultimate fruition depends on the grace-oriented order upheld by Pati (Shiva).
Tapas as a yogic vow-based discipline—steadfast austerity undertaken with reverence (praṇāma) and resolve—aligned with the ascetic strand of Pashupata-oriented practice.