Kirātāvatāra, Durvāsā-upākhyāna, and the Logic of Divine Rescue
Kirātākhyam-avatāra; Pāṇḍava-prasaṅga
किङ्कर्तव्यं क्व गन्तव्यमस्माभिरधुना युधि । समर्था अपि वै सर्वे सत्यपाशेन यन्त्रिताः
kiṅkartavyaṃ kva gantavyamasmābhiradhunā yudhi | samarthā api vai sarve satyapāśena yantritāḥ
„Was sollen wir nun tun, und wohin sollen wir mitten in dieser Schlacht gehen? Obwohl wir alle fähig sind, sind wir durch die Schlinge der Wahrheit gebunden und gehemmt.“
A group of battle-bound beings/opponents (collective voice) within the Shatarudrasaṃhitā narrative, describing their helplessness before Shiva’s satya (truth) power
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Paśupatinātha
It highlights the Shaiva idea that true bondage (pāśa) is not merely physical—divine truth (satya) itself can restrain ego-driven power, showing that only alignment with Shiva (Pati) frees the bound soul (pashu).
Saguna Shiva is portrayed as the active Lord who governs the cosmos through dharma and truth; worship of the Linga trains the devotee to submit the will to Shiva’s order, dissolving the bonds that even mighty beings cannot break.
A practical takeaway is satya-niṣṭhā (steadfastness in truth) supported by japa of the Panchakshara mantra “Om Namaḥ Śivāya,” cultivating inner discipline that loosens pāśa (bondage) and aligns the mind with Shiva’s grace.