Shloka 24

न जातु कामः कामानाम् उपभोगेन शाम्यति हविषा कृष्णवर्त्मेव भूय एवाभिवर्धते

na jātu kāmaḥ kāmānām upabhogena śāmyati haviṣā kṛṣṇavartmeva bhūya evābhivardhate

Keinginan tidak pernah padam dengan menikmati objek yang diingini; seperti api yang disuap dengan persembahan havis, ia semakin membesar. Maka paśu (jiwa yang terikat) hendaklah mengekang kāma dengan vairāgya (ketidakmelekatan) dan memalingkan minda kepada Pati—Tuhan Śiva—yang sahaja memutuskan pāśa (belenggu).

nanot
na:
jātuever/at any time
jātu:
kāmaḥdesire/craving
kāmaḥ:
kāmānāmof desired objects/pleasures
kāmānām:
upabhogenaby enjoyment/consumption
upabhogena:
śāmyatibecomes calm/is extinguished
śāmyati:
haviṣāby oblations (ghee-offerings)
haviṣā:
kṛṣṇa-vartmāthe dark-pathed one, i.e., fire/smoke-trailing flame
kṛṣṇa-vartmā:
ivalike
iva:
bhūyaḥagain/further
bhūyaḥ:
evaindeed
eva:
abhivardhateincreases/grows
abhivardhate:

Suta Goswami (narrating Shaiva dharma instruction within the Linga Purana discourse)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames Linga-worship as inner purification: mere indulgence strengthens kāma, so the devotee approaches the Linga with restraint, offering the mind itself into Śiva, the Pati, to loosen pāśa.

By implication, Śiva-tattva is the liberating principle beyond craving—Pati who is not increased by objects and who grants śānti by cutting the bonds that keep the pashu circling in desire.

Kāma-nigraha through vairāgya as a core Pāśupata-Yogic discipline—treating sense-objects like fuel to a fire and instead redirecting attention to Śiva through japa, dhyāna, and sattvic pūjā.