Adhyaya 40: Kali-yuga Lakshana, Yuga-sandhyamsha, and the Re-emergence of Dharma
प्रनष्टचेष्टनाः पुंसो मुक्तकेशाश् च शूलिनः जनाः षोडशवर्षाश् च प्रजायन्ते युगक्षये
pranaṣṭaceṣṭanāḥ puṃso muktakeśāś ca śūlinaḥ janāḥ ṣoḍaśavarṣāś ca prajāyante yugakṣaye
Beim Zerfall des Yuga werden die Menschen rechter Lebensführung und zielgerichteten Handelns beraubt; sie erscheinen mit wirrem, offenem Haar und Waffen in der Hand, und Nachkommen werden geboren, als reiche ihre Spanne nur sechzehn Jahre—ein unheilvolles Zeichen des Zusammenbruchs der Zeit. In solchen Zeiten vergisst der paśu (die Seele), von pasha‑gleicher Verwirrung getrieben, die glückverheißende Disziplin, die zu Pati, Herrn Śiva, führt.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames yuga-kṣaya as a collapse of disciplined conduct; Linga-worship functions as a stabilizing sādhana that reorients the paśu (soul) toward Pati (Śiva) through purity, restraint, and regular pūjā.
By implication, Śiva-tattva stands as the unchanging Pati amid cyclical decay; when worldly order disintegrates, refuge in Śiva as the steady ground of dharma and liberation becomes paramount.
The verse highlights the need for Pāśupata-style discipline—restraint, śauca (purity), japa, and steadfast Linga-pūjā—as antidotes to the distracted, violent, and unregulated tendencies of yuga-kṣaya.