नारदतपोवर्णनम्
Nārada’s Austerities Described
तया संमोहितोतीव नारदो मुनिसत्तमः । कैलासं प्रययौ शीघ्रं स्ववृत्तं गदितुं मदी
tayā saṃmohitotīva nārado munisattamaḥ | kailāsaṃ prayayau śīghraṃ svavṛttaṃ gadituṃ madī
Lubhang nalinlang ng kanyang kapangyarihan, si Nārada—ang pinakamainam sa mga muni—ay agad na nagtungo sa Kailāsa, na may hangaring isalaysay sa akin ang sariling naranasan.
Brahma
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Paśupatinātha
Sthala Purana: Kailāsa is invoked as Śiva’s nitya-dhāma (eternal abode), the archetypal pilgrimage of the mind toward the Lord after māyā-born bewilderment.
Significance: Turning from delusion to seeking Śiva’s clarification; symbolizes the soul’s return to Pati for instruction and grace.
Shakti Form: Pārvatī
Role: teaching
It shows how even a great sage can be overpowered by moha (delusion), and that the corrective response is to turn toward Śiva (Kailāsa) and report truthfully—seeking clarity through the Lord’s grace rather than trusting a confused mind.
Kailāsa represents Saguna Śiva—approachable as the compassionate Lord who dispels confusion. In practice, devotion to Śiva through Linga-worship and remembrance is presented as a stabilizing refuge when the intellect is shaken by māyā.
The takeaway is to re-center in Śiva-bhakti: quietly repeat the Pañcākṣarī ("Om Namaḥ Śivāya") and approach Śiva through simple Linga-pūjā with bhasma and water, cultivating honesty and self-review (svavṛtta) rather than self-justification.