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Shloka 91

ध्यानयज्ञः, संसार-विष-निरूपणम्, पाशुपतयोगः, परा-अपरा विद्या, चतुर्वस्था-विचारः (अध्यायः ८६)

अस्यैवान्नमिदं सर्वं न सो ऽन्नं भवति स्वयम् स्वात्मना रक्षितं चाद्याद् अन्नभूतं न कुत्रचित्

asyaivānnamidaṃ sarvaṃ na so 'nnaṃ bhavati svayam svātmanā rakṣitaṃ cādyād annabhūtaṃ na kutracit

अस्यैवान्नमिदं सर्वं न सोऽन्नं भवति स्वयम्। स्वात्मना रक्षितं चाद्यादन्नभूतं न कुत्रचित्॥

asya evaof him alone/indeed his
asya eva:
annamfood, that which is enjoyed/consumed
annam:
idam sarvamall this
idam sarvam:
nanot
na:
saḥhe
saḥ:
annam bhavatibecomes food (an object of consumption)
annam bhavati:
svayamby himself/in his own nature
svayam:
svātmanāby his own Self
svātmanā:
rakṣitamprotected/guarded
rakṣitam:
caand
ca:
adyātmay eat/should partake
adyāt:
annabhūtamthat which has become food/fit to be enjoyed
annabhūtam:
na kutracitnowhere/never in any case
na kutracit:

Suta Goswami (narrating the teaching within the Linga Purana discourse)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames the Lord (Pati) as the ultimate enjoyer and sustainer while remaining untouched; in Linga worship, offerings symbolize that all consumables (anna) belong to Shiva, and the devotee partakes only as His protected prasada, reducing possessiveness (pasha).

Shiva is portrayed as transcendent and inviolable: He can ‘enjoy’ the manifested world without ever becoming an object enjoyed by anything else—signifying sovereignty (aiśvarya) and the Self-luminous protection of pure consciousness.

The takeaway aligns with Pashupata discipline of non-appropriation: accept sustenance as protected prasad (measured, non-greedy consumption) and maintain inner detachment so the pashu (soul) is not ‘consumed’ by pasha (sense-bondage).