सुखमायुर्बलं रूपं धर्मो ऽर्थः काम एव च युगेष्वेतानि हीयन्ते त्रींस्त्रीन् पादान् क्रमेण तु
sukhamāyurbalaṃ rūpaṃ dharmo 'rthaḥ kāma eva ca yugeṣvetāni hīyante trīṃstrīn pādān krameṇa tu
Glück, Lebensspanne, Kraft, Schönheit, Dharma, Artha (Wohlstand) und sogar Kāma (Begehren) — in den aufeinanderfolgenden Yugas nehmen all diese Dinge Schritt für Schritt ab, der Ordnung gemäß, jeweils um drei Teile.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames why Kali-yuga practitioners need stronger reliance on Shiva-bhakti and Linga-pūjā: as worldly supports like health, strength, and even dharma decline, the Pashu (bound soul) turns to Pati (Shiva) through devotion and disciplined worship.
By implying that all conditioned excellences (sukha, āyus, bala, rūpa, dharma, artha, kāma) are time-bound and diminishing, it points to Shiva-tattva as the stable Pati beyond yuga-change— the refuge when pāśa (bondage) intensifies.
While not naming a single rite, the teaching supports Kali-yuga emphasis on Shaiva sādhana—regular Linga-pūjā, japa, and Pāśupata-oriented self-discipline (restraint, purity, and devotion) as antidotes to the yuga-wise decline of inner and outer virtues.