Saṃjñā–Chāyā Upākhyāna: Sūrya-tejas, Substitution, and the Birth of Manu, Yama, and Yamunā
सूत उवाच । सा रवेर्वचनं श्रुत्वा यथा तथ्यं न्यवेदयत् । निर्दग्धा कामरविणा सांत्वयामास वै तदा
sūta uvāca | sā ravervacanaṃ śrutvā yathā tathyaṃ nyavedayat | nirdagdhā kāmaraviṇā sāṃtvayāmāsa vai tadā
スータは言った。ラヴィ(太陽神)の言葉を聞くや、彼女は事の次第を真実のままに告げた。ついで欲望なるカーマの「太陽」に灼かれ、その時、彼(彼女)を慰め鎮めようとしたのである。
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Nīlakaṇṭha
The verse highlights truthfulness in speech and the psychological reality that desire burns like a sun; in Shaiva understanding, such inner heat is to be pacified through discernment and turning the mind toward Pati (Śiva), the liberator from pāśa (bondage).
By portraying kama as a scorching force, it indirectly points to the need for refuge in Saguna Śiva—worship of the Liṅga steadies the mind, cools agitation, and redirects emotion into bhakti, which Shaiva Siddhanta treats as a purifier of the bonds of karma and desire.
A practical takeaway is to calm desire through japa of the Pañcākṣarī mantra ("Om Namaḥ Śivāya") and steadying practices like Tripuṇḍra (bhasma) with remembrance of Śiva, cultivating restraint and inner coolness.