एवं वैराग्यमासाद्य पर्य्यंकासादनं च तत् । वारयामास सर्वात्मा परेशः किं पतेदिह
evaṃ vairāgyamāsādya paryyaṃkāsādanaṃ ca tat | vārayāmāsa sarvātmā pareśaḥ kiṃ patediha
Так, достигнув бесстрастия (вайрагья) и решившись на то, чтобы лечь, словно на ложе, Верховный Владыка — Шива, внутренний Атман всех существ — удержал это, помыслив: «Зачем же ему пасть здесь в погибель?»
Sūta Gosvāmi (narrating the Rudrasaṃhitā account to the sages)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
It highlights Shiva as Sarvātmā (the indwelling Self) who governs the soul’s movement: even when dispassion arises, the Lord directs the next step so the being does not “fall” into spiritual ruin, emphasizing divine grace guiding vairāgya toward liberation.
Calling Shiva ‘Pareceśa’ and ‘Sarvātmā’ points to Saguna Shiva as the accessible Lord who actively protects devotees; Linga-worship embodies this same protective, inwardly present Shiva who steadies the mind and turns detachment into steady devotion.
The practical takeaway is inner restraint (saṃyama): sustain vairāgya through japa of the Panchākṣarī (Om Namaḥ Śivāya) and steady meditation on Shiva as the inner Self, supported by Shaiva disciplines such as bhasma (tripuṇḍra) and rudrākṣa where appropriate.