कामशापानुग्रहः (Kāmaśāpānugraha) — “The Curse and Grace Concerning Kāma”
जातो वियद्गतश्शंभुर्विधिं दृष्ट्वा तथाविधम् । मां दक्षाद्यांश्च मनसा जहासोपजहास च
jāto viyadgataśśaṃbhurvidhiṃ dṛṣṭvā tathāvidham | māṃ dakṣādyāṃśca manasā jahāsopajahāsa ca
Tendo-se manifestado e depois movendo-se pelo céu, Śambhu, ao ver Brahmā (Vidhī) naquela condição, riu por dentro—sorrindo para Si mesmo—de mim e também de Dakṣa e dos demais.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Shiva Purana account to the sages, describing Shiva’s response)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Sthala Purana: Not a Jyotirliṅga passage; depicts Śiva’s inward smile at the deluded state of Brahmā and Dakṣa—an implicit commentary on māyā and ego.
Significance: Teaches discernment: even exalted beings can fall under pāśa (kāma/ahaṅkāra); Śiva’s ‘smile’ signals both concealment and impending correction.
Shiva’s inward laughter indicates His transcendence over ego, status, and self-importance; from a Shaiva Siddhanta lens, it points to Pati’s sovereign clarity while bound beings (pashu) remain influenced by pride and misunderstanding.
It frames Shiva as Saguna (Śambhu acting in the world) yet inwardly established in the transcendent; Linga-worship trains the devotee to move from external rank and rivalry to inner surrender to Shiva as the supreme reality.
Practice humble japa of the Panchakshara (Om Namaḥ Śivāya) with Tripuṇḍra and a calm inward gaze, replacing judgment and pride with Shiva-centered awareness (smaraṇa) and gentle detachment.