Upamanyu’s Tapas, Shiva’s Indra-Form Test, and the Bestowal of Kshiroda and Gaṇapatya
कदाचित् क्षीरम् अल्पं च पीतवान् मातुलाश्रमे ईर्ष्यया मातुलसुतो ह्य् अपिबत् क्षीरम् उत्तमम्
kadācit kṣīram alpaṃ ca pītavān mātulāśrame īrṣyayā mātulasuto hy apibat kṣīram uttamam
ある時、母方の叔父のアーシュラマに滞在していた折、彼は乳をわずかに飲んだだけであった。ところが叔父の子は嫉みの心に駆られ、最上の乳を飲み尽くしてしまった。かくして、嫉妬というパーシャに縛られたパシュの心は、サットヴァ的な滋養から背を向け、貪りの執着へと堕ちてゆく。
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames inner purification as the foundation of liṅga-pūjā: envy (īrṣyā) is a pāśa that makes the mind grasping, so devotion must be accompanied by restraint and sāttvika conduct.
By contrast: Shiva as Pati is the purifier and witness, while envy shows the pashu’s bondage. The verse implies that turning toward Shiva-tattva requires abandoning possessiveness and jealousy.
A practical Pāśupata takeaway: cultivate vairāgya and self-control (indriya-nigraha), replacing envy with contentment—so offerings and daily discipline become inwardly truthful, not merely external.