Gṛhapati’s Vow: Turning Grief into Mṛtyuñjaya–Mahākāla Sādhana (गृहपतेः प्रतिज्ञा—मृत्युंजय-महाकालजपः)
नन्दीश्वर उवाच । विश्वानरस्सपत्नीकस्तच्छ्रुत्वा नारदेरितम् । तदेवम्मन्यमानोभूद्वज्रपातं सुदारुणम्
nandīśvara uvāca | viśvānarassapatnīkastacchrutvā nāraderitam | tadevammanyamānobhūdvajrapātaṃ sudāruṇam
Dijo Nandīśvara: Viśvānara, junto con su esposa, oyó lo que Nārada había declarado. Tomándolo así en su corazón, quedó abatido por una calamidad terribilísima, como la caída de un vajra.
Nandishvara (Nandi)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Paśupatinātha
Shakti Form: Pārvatī
Role: nurturing
Cosmic Event: vajrapāta imagery (thunderbolt-like calamity)
The verse frames how a single teaching or provocation can quickly mature into karmic consequence—described as a “vajrapāta,” a sudden, crushing turn—urging discernment and steadiness on the Shaiva path.
By showing the fragility of worldly conditions, it implicitly turns the mind toward refuge in Saguna Shiva—steadfast devotion to Śiva and His signs (like the Liṅga) as the stabilizing center amid upheaval.
Cultivate mental restraint and take shelter in Śiva-nāma: steady japa of the Pañcākṣarī (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) as a remedy when the mind is shaken by fear or sudden reversals.