नैमित्तिकविधिक्रमः
Occasional Rites and Their Procedure
आवृत्ते ऽपि च कल्याणे प्रशस्तेष्वपि कर्मसु । दौर्मनस्ये दुराचारे दुःस्वप्ने दुष्टदर्शने
āvṛtte 'pi ca kalyāṇe praśasteṣvapi karmasu | daurmanasye durācāre duḥsvapne duṣṭadarśane
Dẫu các bổn phận cát tường và đáng khen vẫn được thực hành đúng đắn, nếu tâm u uất khởi lên, nếu lỡ sa vào hạnh xấu, nếu gặp ác mộng, hoặc thấy điềm dữ—hãy nhận biết đó là những xao động nội tâm, nhắc ta trở về với sự phân biệt và thanh tịnh đặt Śiva làm trung tâm.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Dakṣiṇāmūrti
Significance: Frames psychological gloom, moral lapse, nightmares, and ominous perceptions as signs of mala/āvaraṇa (bondage factors) requiring renewed Śiva-oriented purification and discernment.
Role: teaching
It teaches that external virtue alone is not the full measure of dharma—if the mind falls into gloom, ethics decline, or inauspicious experiences arise, one should treat them as signs of bondage (pāśa) and return to Shiva-oriented purification, steadiness, and right conduct.
Such disturbances are traditionally resolved by taking refuge in Saguna Shiva—Linga worship, remembrance of Shiva’s auspiciousness, and disciplined devotion—so the mind becomes clear and conduct becomes aligned with dharma.
A practical takeaway is to intensify Shiva-sādhana: japa of the Panchakshara (Om Namaḥ Śivāya), mental restraint and confession-like self-correction, and simple purificatory worship (e.g., Linga abhisheka and wearing vibhuti/tripundra) to stabilize the mind and remove inauspiciousness.