यतिप्रायश्चित्तविधानम्
Ascetic Atonements and Discipline
कृच्छ्रातिकृच्छ्रं कुर्वीत चान्द्रायणमथापि वा स्कन्देदिन्द्रियदौर्बल्यात् स्त्रियं दृष्ट्वा यतिर्यदि
kṛcchrātikṛcchraṃ kurvīta cāndrāyaṇamathāpi vā skandedindriyadaurbalyāt striyaṃ dṛṣṭvā yatiryadi
Si un yati (renunciante), por debilidad de los sentidos, al ver a una mujer sufre una caída seminal, debe cumplir la severa expiación llamada Kṛcchrātikṛcchra, o bien asumir el voto de Cāndrāyaṇa. Con ese tapas, el paśu (alma atada) disciplina los indriyas, afloja el pasha (la atadura) y vuelve su corazón hacia Pati, el Señor Śiva.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the Sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames Linga-centered Shaiva life as grounded in purity and self-restraint: when a lapse occurs, prescribed prāyaścitta restores adhikāra (fitness) for Shiva-upāsanā and reorients the pashu toward Pati.
Shiva-tattva is implied as Pati—the liberating Lord—toward whom the soul must turn by removing pasha (bondage) created and strengthened by indriya-daurbalya; expiation and tapas become means to re-establish that alignment.
It highlights prāyaścitta through Kṛcchrātikṛcchra and Cāndrāyaṇa, paired with yogic indriya-nigraha (sense-control) as essential discipline for a yati in the Pashupata-oriented Shaiva path.