प्रलय-तत्त्वलयः, नीललोहित-रुद्रः, अष्टमूर्तिस्तवः, एवं ब्रह्मणो वैराग्यम्
जहौ प्राणांश् च भगवान् क्रोधाविष्टः प्रजापतिः ततः प्राणमयो रुद्रः प्रादुरासीत्प्रभोर्मुखात्
jahau prāṇāṃś ca bhagavān krodhāviṣṭaḥ prajāpatiḥ tataḥ prāṇamayo rudraḥ prādurāsītprabhormukhāt
Vencido por la ira, el venerable Prajāpati expulsó sus alientos vitales; y de la boca del Señor se manifestó Rudra, hecho de prāṇa mismo: Pati, el principio soberano que más tarde libera al paśu (alma atada) del pāśa (atadura).
Suta Goswami (narrating the Purāṇic account to the sages; internal event describes Prajāpati/Brahmā’s act)
It frames Rudra’s emergence as a primal, life-force (prāṇa) manifestation—supporting the Linga as the formless Pati-principle behind all embodied life, worthy of worship beyond mere anthropomorphic form.
Shiva appears as Rudra “made of prāṇa,” indicating his immanence within all beings as their inner vitality while remaining the transcendent Pati who can sever pāśa and restore the paśu to freedom.
A prāṇa-centered Shaiva reading aligns with Pāśupata Yoga: disciplining prāṇa (breath-life) as a means to purify the paśu and orient consciousness toward Pati, the Rudra principle.