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Shloka 49

मुनिमोहशमनम्

Pāśupata-yoga, Siddhis, Puruṣa-darśana, Saṃsāra, and Prāṇa-Rudra Pañcāhutī

कालेन कललं चापि बुद्बुदं सम्प्रजायते मृत्पिण्डस्तु यथा चक्रे चक्रावर्तेन पीडितः

kālena kalalaṃ cāpi budbudaṃ samprajāyate mṛtpiṇḍastu yathā cakre cakrāvartena pīḍitaḥ

Pela força do Tempo (Kāla), a massa inicial (kalala) do embrião também se torna uma forma semelhante a uma bolha; como um torrão de barro que, pressionado e impelido pelo redemoinho da roda do oleiro, se transforma.

kālenaby Time (Kāla)
kālena:
kalalamthe first embryonic mass, gelatinous stage
kalalam:
ca apiand also
ca api:
budbudama bubble, blister-like form
budbudam:
samprajāyatecomes into being, is produced
samprajāyate:
mṛtpiṇḍaḥ tubut a lump of clay
mṛtpiṇḍaḥ tu:
yathājust as
yathā:
cakreon the wheel
cakre:
cakrāvartenaby the wheel’s whirl/rotation
cakrāvartena:
pīḍitaḥpressed, compressed, driven
pīḍitaḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating the cosmological/embryological teaching within the Linga Purana discourse)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames Kāla (Time) as an operative Shakti under Pati (Shiva), showing that embodied formation is shaped by forces beyond the individual; Linga worship turns the mind from Kāla-bound becoming toward the timeless Lord signified by the Linga.

Shiva-tattva is implied as the sovereign Pati who governs Kāla and transformation: bodies change like clay on a wheel, while Shiva remains the inner ruler enabling change without being limited by it.

The takeaway aligns with Pāśupata-oriented vairāgya and meditation: contemplate bodily formation as Kāla-driven (pāśa) and fix awareness on Shiva as Pati, the transcendent ground beyond time—often supported by Linga-dhyāna and mantra-japa.