नन्दिकेश्वरोत्पत्तिः — Nandikesvara’s Origin, Shiva’s Boons, and the Rise of Sacred Rivers
अहो बलं दैवविधेर् विधातुश्चेति दुःखितः तस्य चार्तस्वरं श्रुत्वा तदाश्रमनिवासिनः
aho balaṃ daivavidher vidhātuśceti duḥkhitaḥ tasya cārtasvaraṃ śrutvā tadāśramanivāsinaḥ
अहो बलं दैवविधेर् विधातुश्चेति दुःखितः । तस्य चार्तस्वरं श्रुत्वा तदाश्रमनिवासिनः ॥
Suta Goswami (narrating the episode to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames human suffering as arising within daiva (karmic ordinance), implying that refuge in Pati (Śiva)—often approached through liṅga-pūjā—becomes the turning point beyond mere fatalism.
By highlighting the crushing force of destiny under the Creator’s order, the narrative sets up the Shaiva Siddhanta contrast: while pāśa binds the paśu through karmic law, Śiva as Pati is the transcendent Lord whose grace can release the bound soul.
No specific rite is named in this line; it functions as a narrative trigger (āarta-śabda) that typically leads to guidance—often culminating in liṅga-sevā, prayer, and Pāśupata-oriented discipline to move from lamentation to surrender and purification.