Adhyaya 52: सोमाधारः, पुण्योदानदी, मेरुप्रदक्षिणा, जम्बूद्वीपनववर्षवर्णनम्
कुरुवर्षे तु कुरवः स्वर्गलोकात् परिच्युताः सर्वे मैथुनजाताश् च क्षीरिणः क्षीरभोजनाः
kuruvarṣe tu kuravaḥ svargalokāt paricyutāḥ sarve maithunajātāś ca kṣīriṇaḥ kṣīrabhojanāḥ
Pero en Kuruvarṣa, los Kurus son todos aquellos que han caído del mundo celestial. Todos nacen por unión sexual, y viven sostenidos por la leche: nutridos por la leche y alimentándose de leche.
Suta Goswami
It frames embodied life as a karmic descent from higher lokas, implying that the Pashu (individual soul) needs Shiva’s grace (Pati) and Shaiva dharma—such as Linga-puja—to transcend pasha (bondage) and the cycle of falling and rising through worlds.
Indirectly: by describing beings who fall from Svarga due to karma, it points to Shiva-tattva as the transcendent Pati beyond loka-bound fluctuation—He alone grants stability in liberation (moksha) rather than temporary heavenly enjoyment.
No specific rite is named, but the karmic theme supports the Shaiva takeaway: practice Pashupata-oriented discipline and Linga-puja to cut pasha and avoid merely cycling between svarga and earthly birth.