Kāla-vañcana (Overcoming/Outwitting Time) and the Pañcabhūta Basis of the Body
त्रिगुणं च तथा तेजो वायुर्द्विगुण एव च । शब्दैकगुणमाकाशं पृथिव्यादिषु कीर्तितम्
triguṇaṃ ca tathā tejo vāyurdviguṇa eva ca | śabdaikaguṇamākāśaṃ pṛthivyādiṣu kīrtitam
పృథివి మొదలైన భూతతత్త్వ బోధలో ఇలా కీర్తించబడింది—అగ్ని త్రిగుణము, వాయువు ద్విగుణము, ఆకాశము ఏకగుణము, అది ‘శబ్ద’మే।
Lord Shiva (teaching Uma/Parvati in the Umāsaṃhitā philosophical discourse)
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Dakṣiṇāmūrti
Shakti Form: Pārvatī
Role: teaching
It maps the graded manifestation of prakriti in the elements: from subtle (ākāśa with sound alone) to progressively grosser. In Shaiva Siddhanta, such discrimination (viveka) supports detachment from pasha (bondage) and turns the seeker toward Pati (Shiva), the transcendent source beyond the guṇas.
The Linga is revered as the axis of tattvas—from the gross elements up to the subtle. Knowing that even ākāśa is defined by a limited quality (sound) helps the devotee see that all manifested qualities are finite, while Shiva (worshiped in the Linga) is the Lord of the tattvas, not confined by them.
A practical takeaway is subtle meditation on sound (nāda/śabda) as the finest mark of the elements—supporting japa of the Panchakshara “Om Namaḥ Śivāya” and inner listening (śravaṇa) to refine awareness from gross to subtle while keeping devotion to Shiva.