Nara-Narayana’s Tapas, Indra’s Temptation, and the Burning of Kama: The Origin of Ananga and the Shiva-Linga Episode
एवं दग्ध्वा स्मरं रुद्रः संयम्य स्वतनुं विभुः पुष्यार्था शिशिराद्रिं स जगाम तपसे ऽव्ययः
evaṃ dagdhvā smaraṃ rudraḥ saṃyamya svatanuṃ vibhuḥ puṣyārthā śiśirādriṃ sa jagāma tapase 'vyayaḥ
ఇలా స్మరుణ్ని (కాముణ్ని) దహించి, విభువైన రుద్రుడు తన దేహాన్ని నియమించాడు; పుష్టి/మంగళవృద్ధి నిమిత్తం, అవ్యయుడైన అతడు తపస్సుకు శిశిరాద్రికి వెళ్లెను।
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After destroying disruptive desire (Kāma), Rudra models saṃyama and tapas: the restoration of order is not merely punitive but followed by disciplined inwardness aimed at puṣṭi—sustaining auspicious well-being.
Primarily charita (deity-act narrative) with a didactic function; it also gestures to dharma through exemplifying tapas as a cosmic stabilizer, a common Purāṇic narrative use within sarga-related mythic cycles.
Śiśirādri (‘cool mountain’) symbolically contrasts the ‘heat’ of passion and the ‘fire’ of Rudra’s wrath: post-burning, the movement to a ‘cool’ locus suggests sublimation of energy into spiritual practice.