कैलासगमनं कुबेरसख्यं च — Śiva’s Journey to Kailāsa and His Friendship with Kubera
यद्यन्मध्यगृहे पश्येत्तत्तन्नीत्वा सुदुर्मतिः । अर्पयेद्द्यूतकाराणां सकुप्यं वसनादिकम्
yadyanmadhyagṛhe paśyettattannītvā sudurmatiḥ | arpayeddyūtakārāṇāṃ sakupyaṃ vasanādikam
Tout ce qu’il voyait dans la maison, cet homme au mauvais esprit l’emportait et le remettait aux joueurs—biens du foyer, vêtements et autres—jetant ainsi la demeure dans la ruine.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Paśupatinātha
Significance: Household-dharma collapse illustrates karmic entanglement (pāśa). The implied corrective is turning to Śiva through vrata/japa and restitution.
It warns that vice—here, gambling—destroys dharma by turning the mind outward into greed and compulsion, leading one to violate truth and non-stealing; Shaiva teaching emphasizes purification of conduct as a foundation for devotion to Shiva.
Linga-worship requires inner and outer purity (ācāra). A life driven by gambling and theft undermines the steadiness, sattva, and integrity needed for sincere Saguna Shiva worship and for receiving Shiva’s grace (anugraha).
The practical takeaway is restraint (niyama): avoid gambling and cultivate disciplined daily worship—japa of the Pañcākṣarī (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) and simple, honest living—so the mind becomes fit for bhakti.