Strī-svabhāva-kathanam: Nārada–Pañcacūḍā-saṃvāda
Discourse on Dispassion via the Nārada–Pañcacūḍā Dialogue
यदि पुंसां गतिर्ब्रह्मन्कथंचिन्नोपपद्यते । अप्यन्योन्यं प्रवर्तन्ते न च तिष्ठन्ति भर्तृषु
yadi puṃsāṃ gatirbrahmankathaṃcinnopapadyate | apyanyonyaṃ pravartante na ca tiṣṭhanti bhartṛṣu
ໂອ ພຣາຫມັນ! ເມື່ອເສັ້ນທາງອັນຖືກຕ້ອງ ແລະ ຈຸດໝາຍສູງສຸດຂອງມະນຸດ ບໍ່ອາດຕັ້ງຢູ່ໄດ້ເລີຍ, ພວກເຂົາຈຶ່ງຫັນໄປຫາກັນດ້ວຍຄວາມຮົ່ນຮ້ອນ ແລະ ບໍ່ຢືນຢັນໃນຄວາມພັກດີຕໍ່ຜູ້ຄ້ຳຈຸນອັນຄວນ (ຜົວ/ນາຍ) ເລີຍ.
Lord Shiva (teaching within Umāsaṃhitā philosophical discourse)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Dakṣiṇāmūrti
It teaches that when the soul’s true gati—refuge and final end in Pati (Shiva)—is not recognized, the mind becomes outward-turned and unstable, chasing mutual worldly attachments instead of abiding in dharma and inner steadiness.
Linga/Saguna worship provides a stable spiritual center for the wandering mind. By fixing awareness on Shiva as the abiding Lord (Pati), one gains a firm ‘support’ that counters restlessness and attachment-driven movement.
Regular japa of the Panchakshara mantra (Om Namaḥ Śivāya) with daily Shiva-upasana (Linga worship), supported by dharmic vows and inner restraint, is the practical remedy for instability and outward craving implied by the verse.