वासिष्ठकथनम् (आदित्य–सोमवंशवर्णनम् तथा रुद्रसहस्रनाम-प्रशंसा)
शिरोविमर्शनः सर्वलक्ष्यलक्षणभूषितः अक्षयो रथगीतश् च सर्वभोगी महाबलः
śirovimarśanaḥ sarvalakṣyalakṣaṇabhūṣitaḥ akṣayo rathagītaś ca sarvabhogī mahābalaḥ
وہ شِرووِمرشن ہے—کرم سے سر پر ہاتھ رکھ کر انُگرہ دینے والا؛ ہر طرح کی مبارک علامتوں سے آراستہ۔ وہ اَکشَی (لازوال) ہے؛ رتھ گیت میں ستودہ؛ وہ سَرو بھوگی (انتر یامی) اور مہا بل والا ہے۔
Suta Goswami (narrating a Shiva Sahasranama section to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames Shiva as the imperishable Pati who grants anugraha (grace) and bears all auspicious marks—supporting Linga worship as approaching the supreme Lord beyond decay, who blesses the pashu (soul) and loosens pasha (bondage).
Shiva is presented as Akshaya (unchanging reality) and Sarvabhogi—not as a limited enjoyer, but as the inner sovereign who pervades and governs all experiences while remaining transcendent and immensely powerful.
The key takeaway is anugraha-centered devotion: recitation of Shiva’s names (nama-japa/sahasranama) and Linga-upasana to receive the Lord’s ‘head-touch’ blessing—symbolizing initiation-like grace that advances the pashu toward liberation.