नन्दिकेशावतारवर्णनम् (Nandikeśa Avatāra Varṇanam) — “Account of the Descent/Origin of Nandikeśvara”
शिलादोऽपि च मां दृष्ट्वा कालसूर्य्यानलप्रभम् । त्र्यक्षं चतुर्भुजं बालं जटामुकुटधारिणम्
śilādo'pi ca māṃ dṛṣṭvā kālasūryyānalaprabham | tryakṣaṃ caturbhujaṃ bālaṃ jaṭāmukuṭadhāriṇam
شیلاَد نے بھی مجھے دیکھا—زمانہ (کال)، سورج اور آگ کی مانند درخشاں؛ سہ چشم، چار بازوؤں والا بالک، جٹاؤں کا تاج دھارے ہوئے۔
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Sthala Purana: Darśana of Śiva in a paradoxical form—childlike yet blazing like Kāla, Sūrya, and Agni—echoes the Purāṇic motif that the infinite Lord assumes approachable forms for devotees while retaining transcendent majesty.
Significance: Encourages bhakta-darśana: the Lord may appear in unexpected forms (bāla-rūpa) to grant intimacy while revealing cosmic sovereignty (kāla-tejas).
Role: teaching
Cosmic Event: Kāla-tejas imagery (Time as cosmic principle) invoked metaphorically
It highlights that the infinite Pati (Lord Shiva) compassionately reveals Himself in a graspable, saguna form—yet with cosmic signs (Time, sun, fire)—so the devotee’s bhakti can mature into liberating knowledge.
Though Shiva is ultimately beyond form (nirguṇa), this verse affirms saguna-darśana: Shiva can be worshipped as a personal Lord with attributes; such worship naturally supports linga-upāsanā by fixing the mind on Shiva as the supreme reality.
Meditate on Shiva’s tri-netra (three-eyed) presence and repeat the Panchākṣarī mantra “Om Namaḥ Śivāya,” visualizing His fiery, sun-like brilliance while maintaining purity with bhasma (tripuṇḍra) and steady devotion.