Adhyaya 22 — शिवानुग्रहः, ब्रह्मतपः, एकादशरुद्राः तथा प्राणतत्त्वम्
अहो धिक् तपसो मह्यं फलमीदृशकं यदि लोकवैनाशिकी जज्ञे आदावेव प्रजा मम
aho dhik tapaso mahyaṃ phalamīdṛśakaṃ yadi lokavaināśikī jajñe ādāveva prajā mama
Ai de mim—vergonha para a minha austeridade, se o seu fruto é realmente assim: que a minha progénie, nascida logo no princípio, tenha surgido como força de ruína para os mundos.
Brahma (within Suta’s narration to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It highlights that mere tapas can yield perilous outcomes when not aligned with Pati (Shiva); Linga-worship is implied as the stabilizing recourse that restores dharma and cosmic order.
By contrast: creation without the governance of Pati leads to lokavaināśa (world-ruin). Shiva-tattva is the regulating, purifying principle that turns chaotic emergence into auspicious manifestation.
The verse foregrounds tapas and its karma-phala; the Shaiva takeaway is to yoke austerity to Pashupata discipline—purification of the pashu and loosening of pasha through Shiva-oriented sadhana.