हिरण्यनेत्रस्य तपः — Hiraṇyanetra’s Austerity and the Boon
अंधक उवाच । कथं विभो वैरिबलं प्रविश्य ह्यनेन देहेन करोमि युद्धम् । स्नाय्वस्थिशेषं कुरु मांसपुष्टं करेण पुण्ये न च मां स्पृशाद्य
aṃdhaka uvāca | kathaṃ vibho vairibalaṃ praviśya hyanena dehena karomi yuddham | snāyvasthiśeṣaṃ kuru māṃsapuṣṭaṃ kareṇa puṇye na ca māṃ spṛśādya
アンダカは言った。「おお主よ、いかにしてこの身で敵軍の中へ入り、戦うことができましょうか。筋と骨ばかりではなく、肉を備えた堅固な身としてください。あなたの吉祥なる御手によって我を回復し、どうか再びこのように我に触れ給うな。」
Andhaka
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Role: nurturing
The verse highlights the limitation of embodied power: even a mighty warrior becomes helpless when the body is weakened. From a Shaiva Siddhanta lens, it points to the soul’s dependence (paśu) upon the Lord (Pati) and exposes how ego seeks strength without inner purification.
Andhaka addresses the Lord as a personal, responsive deity—Saguna Shiva—whose “hand” can restore or restrain. In Linga-worship, this becomes a reminder that true protection and capability arise from Shiva’s grace, not merely from physical prowess.
A practical takeaway is to cultivate surrender and restraint through japa of the Panchakshara (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) and simple Shaiva disciplines like vibhuti (tripuṇḍra) and Rudraksha—seeking strength aligned with dharma rather than force driven by pride.