अध्याय 91: अरिष्ट-लक्षण, मृत्यु-संस्कार, पाशुपत-धारणा तथा ओङ्कार-उपासना
यस्तु प्रावरणं शुक्लं स्वकं पश्यति मानवः कृष्णं रक्तमपि स्वप्ने तस्य मृत्युरुपस्थितः
yastu prāvaraṇaṃ śuklaṃ svakaṃ paśyati mānavaḥ kṛṣṇaṃ raktamapi svapne tasya mṛtyurupasthitaḥ
If a person sees his own garment as white, yet in the same dream it appears black or blood‑red, then for him death has drawn near. Such a vision is a nimitta (omen) indicating the loosening of the pāśa (bond) by Kāla, until the paśu (embodied soul) turns to Pati—Śiva—for refuge.
Suta Goswami
It frames death as a predictable shift of karma and Kāla; in Linga worship the response is to take refuge in Pati (Śiva) through japa, abhiṣeka, and remembrance, transforming fear into surrender.
By implying that while Kāla and mṛtyu approach the pashu, ultimate refuge lies in Pati—Śiva, who transcends time and can sever pasha (bondage) through grace.
Nimitta-based correction: after inauspicious dreams, one should intensify Śiva-smaraṇa, Rudra-japa and Linga-abhiṣeka, aligning the mind in Pāśupata restraint to face Kāla with steadiness.