Adhyaya 40: Kali-yuga Lakshana, Yuga-sandhyamsha, and the Re-emergence of Dharma
अहोरात्रात्तदा तासां युगं तु परिवर्तते चित्तसंमोहनं कृत्वा तासां वै सुप्तमत्तवत्
ahorātrāttadā tāsāṃ yugaṃ tu parivartate cittasaṃmohanaṃ kṛtvā tāsāṃ vai suptamattavat
அப்போது அவர்களுக்காக ஒரு நாள்-இரவு அளவிலேயே யுகம் மாறிவிட்டது. மனம் மயங்கச் செய்யப்பட்டதால் அவர்கள் உறங்குபவர் அல்லது மயக்கமுற்றவர் போல ஆனார்கள்.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Purana to the sages of Naimisharanya; describing Shiva’s māyā within the episode)
It highlights Shiva as Pati who governs Kāla (time) and Moha (delusion); Linga-worship is presented as an anchor that steadies the pashu’s mind and helps cut pasha—so time and experience no longer overpower consciousness.
Shiva-tattva is shown as sovereign over time-cycles (yuga-parivarta) and as the wielder of māyā that can veil awareness; the same Lord who binds through moha also grants clarity for liberation when approached through right knowledge and devotion.
The implied practice is citta-śuddhi (purification of mind) central to Pāśupata-oriented discipline—countering citta-saṃmohana through japa, dhyāna on the Linga, and steadying awareness against sleep-like tamas and intoxication-like pramāda.