प्रकृतितत्त्व-विचारः / Inquiry into Prakṛti (Nature/Śakti) and Śiva’s Transcendence
तस्माच्च प्रकृतेस्सद्भिर्न कार्यस्संग्रहः क्वचित् । स्थातव्यं निर्विकारैश्च लोकाचार विवर्जितैः
tasmācca prakṛtessadbhirna kāryassaṃgrahaḥ kvacit | sthātavyaṃ nirvikāraiśca lokācāra vivarjitaiḥ
Ainsi, pour les nobles qui recherchent le Bien suprême, il ne doit jamais y avoir thésaurisation ni accumulation possessive issue de Prakṛti (la nature mondaine). Qu’on demeure ferme, sans altération intérieure, et qu’on vive détaché des seules conventions sociales, établi dans une pureté d’être inébranlable.
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva’s renunciant teaching within the Parvati Khanda context)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Dakṣiṇāmūrti
It teaches vairāgya (dispassion): liberation is supported by refusing possessive accumulation born of Prakṛti and by abiding as nirvikāra—steady, unshaken awareness oriented to Shiva rather than social approval.
Linga-worship trains the devotee to shift identity from external status and possessions to Shiva as the inner Self and supreme Lord (Pati). Detachment from “lokācāra” helps keep worship pure—offered for moksha and devotion, not for display.
Cultivate daily steadiness through japa of the Panchākṣarī (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) with a simple, non-ostentatious discipline; keep life minimal, and meditate on Shiva with an unmodified (nirvikāra) mind rather than chasing social rituals for prestige.