Nara-Narayana’s Tapas, Indra’s Temptation, and the Burning of Kama: The Origin of Ananga and the Shiva-Linga Episode
ततो हरः शरेणाथ उन्मादेनाशु ताडितः विचचार तदोन्मत्तः काननानि सरांसि च
tato haraḥ śareṇātha unmādenāśu tāḍitaḥ vicacāra tadonmattaḥ kānanāni sarāṃsi ca
Daraufhin wurde Hara rasch von jenem Pfeil der Verblendung getroffen und irrte umher; in Raserei durchstreifte er die Wälder und auch die Seen und Teiche.
{ "primaryRasa": "karuna", "secondaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Even divine narratives portray the gravity of grief and mental disturbance to teach compassion and the necessity of restoring balance through higher knowledge and divine intervention.
Vamśānucarita: an illustrative episode about Śiva’s state after Satī’s death and Kāma’s intervention, embedded within broader Purāṇic instruction.
Forests and waters function as liminal spaces: the mind (Śiva’s roaming) moves through untamed impulses (forest) and emotional depths (lakes) until order is re-established.