सर्गविभागवर्णनम्
Classification of Creation: the Nine Sargas and the Streams of Beings
ते सुखप्रीतिबहुला बहिरन्तश्च नावृताः । प्रकाशा बहिरन्तश्चस्वभावादेव संज्ञिताः । ततो ऽभिध्यायतोव्यक्तादर्वाक्स्रोतस्तु साधकः । मनुष्यनामा सञ्जातः सर्गो दुःखसमुत्कटः
te sukhaprītibahulā bahirantaśca nāvṛtāḥ | prakāśā bahirantaścasvabhāvādeva saṃjñitāḥ | tato 'bhidhyāyatovyaktādarvāksrotastu sādhakaḥ | manuṣyanāmā sañjātaḥ sargo duḥkhasamutkaṭaḥ
彼らは幸福と歓喜に満ち、内にも外にも覆いがない。生来、内外ともに「光り輝く者」と呼ばれる。次いで未顕(アヴィヤクタ, Avyakta)が観想されると、下向きに流れる潮流—成就を求めて努める者—が起こり、「人間」と名づけられる創造が生じた。それは苦が激しく交じり合うものであった。
Suta Goswami (narrating the Vāyavīya discourse to the sages of Naimisharanya)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Dakṣiṇāmūrti
Role: teaching
Cosmic Event: arvāk-srotas (downward-flowing) human creation emerges from avyakta—unique as ‘sādhaka’ yet duḥkha-pradhāna
It contrasts luminous, less-veiled states with the human creation that arises in the downward current of manifestation, emphasizing that embodied life is strongly marked by duḥkha due to limitation and bondage (pāśa), and thus calls for turning toward Pati (Shiva) for liberation.
Since the human stream is described as striving amid suffering, the Linga serves as a concrete Saguna support for returning the mind from outward descent (arvāksrotas) toward Shiva—stabilizing devotion, purification, and inward luminosity.
A practical takeaway is japa of the Panchakshara (Om Namaḥ Śivāya) with inward contemplation, supported by simple Shaiva observances like Tripuṇḍra (bhasma) and Rudrāksha, to reverse the mind’s outward pull and lessen duḥkha.