Nara-Narayana’s Tapas, Indra’s Temptation, and the Burning of Kama: The Origin of Ananga and the Shiva-Linga Episode
यस्त्वां यदा पश्यति चैत्रमासे स्पृशेन्नरो वार्चयते च भक्त्या वृद्धो ऽथ बालो ऽथ युवाथ योषित् सर्वे तदोन्मादधरा भवन्ति
yastvāṃ yadā paśyati caitramāse spṛśennaro vārcayate ca bhaktyā vṛddho 'tha bālo 'tha yuvātha yoṣit sarve tadonmādadharā bhavanti
Quienquiera que, en el mes de Caitra, te vea, o que un hombre te toque, o te adore con devoción—sea anciano, niño, joven o mujer—todos ellos entonces se convierten en portadores de unmāda (arrebato/locura).
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Devotional contact—seeing, touching, worshipping—when aligned with sacred time (Caitra) is said to transform all social categories equally, implying a leveling force of bhakti that overrides age and gender distinctions.
Dharma/ācāra-oriented narrative insert (often embedded in Purāṇic carita): it prescribes/validates ritual efficacy tied to kāla (time), a common Purāṇic strategy for sacralizing calendrical observance.
‘Unmāda’ can be read as devotional ecstasy (bhāva) rather than pathology: the boon makes the devotee ‘mad’ with joy, signaling a liminal state where ordinary decorum yields to sacred rapture.