शिवरूपदर्शनम्
Menā’s Vision of Śiva’s Divine Form
ब्रह्मोवाच । इत्थं सम्भाष्य सा मेना संस्तूयेन्दुललाटकम् । साञ्जलिः प्रणता शैलप्रिया लज्जापराऽभवत्
brahmovāca | itthaṃ sambhāṣya sā menā saṃstūyendulalāṭakam | sāñjaliḥ praṇatā śailapriyā lajjāparā'bhavat
Brahmā dit : Après avoir ainsi parlé, Menā loua le Bien-aimé de la Montagne, Celui dont le front porte le croissant de lune. Les mains jointes, elle se prosterna, et Śailapriyā (Pārvatī) devint d’une pudeur et d’une timidité extrêmes.
Brahma
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Mantra: indulalāṭaka (epithet of Śiva)
Type: stotra
Shakti Form: Pārvatī
Role: nurturing
Offering: pushpa
It highlights bhakti expressed through praise and namaskāra to Saguna Śiva (the Moon-crested Lord), and shows the inner transformation it evokes—humility and modest purity in Pārvatī, a sign of ripening devotion and grace.
The epithet “moon on the forehead” points to Saguna Śiva—worshipped through names, forms, and symbols (including the Liṅga). Praise (stuti) and folded-hands reverence are classic modes of approaching the Liṅga as the compassionate, accessible manifestation of Pati (Lord) for the devotee.
A simple practice is stuti with añjali (folded hands) and praṇāma before a Śiva-liṅga, contemplating Candraśekhara (the Moon-crested Śiva) while repeating the Pañcākṣarī—“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”—to cultivate humility and devotional steadiness.