मन्त्रसिद्धिः, प्रतिबन्धनिरासः, श्रद्धा-नियमाः
Mantra Efficacy, Removal of Obstacles, and the Role of Faith/Discipline
ताडनं रुधिरेण स्यात्खरस्योष्ट्रस्य चोभयोः । मारणोच्चाटने कुर्याद्रोहिबीजैस्तिलान्वितैः
tāḍanaṃ rudhireṇa syātkharasyoṣṭrasya cobhayoḥ | māraṇoccāṭane kuryādrohibījaistilānvitaiḥ
ターḍナ(打撃)の作法には、驢馬の血、あるいは駱駝の血、またはその両方を用いるべきである。マーラナ(滅却)とウッチャータナ(追放)の行には、ローヒーの種子を胡麻と和えて修すべし。
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Bhairava
Shakti Form: Kālī
Role: destructive
It illustrates how certain ritual technologies can be directed toward tamasic ends (harm, coercion), which Shaiva Siddhanta treats as strengthening pāśa (bondage). The implied lesson is discernment: true devotion to Pati (Shiva) aims at purification and liberation, not domination.
By contrast: Linga-worship and Saguna Shiva upāsanā are meant to refine the mind through mantra, bhasma, and bhakti. Practices aimed at māraṇa/uccāṭana run opposite to the liberating intent of Shiva worship, which is to dissolve malice and ego rather than empower them.
The verse mentions ritual ingredients for tāḍana, māraṇa, and uccāṭana, but it does not prescribe a Shaiva meditative discipline. From a Shaiva Siddhanta lens, the practical takeaway is to prefer sattvic Shiva practices—Pañcākṣara japa ("Om Namaḥ Śivāya"), Tripuṇḍra (bhasma), and Rudrākṣa—over harmful rites.