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Shloka 24

Adhyaya 8: Yogasthanas, Ashtanga Yoga, Pranayama-Siddhi, and Shiva-Dhyana leading to Samadhi

भोगेन तृप्तिर्नैवास्ति विषयाणां विचारतः तस्माद्विरागः कर्तव्यो मनसा कर्मणा गिरा

bhogena tṛptirnaivāsti viṣayāṇāṃ vicārataḥ tasmādvirāgaḥ kartavyo manasā karmaṇā girā

审察诸根境之真实体性,便知享受从不带来真正的满足。故当以心、以行、以言修习离贪(virāga),使被缚之灵(paśu)松解系缚之索(pāśa),转向主宰(Pati)——湿婆(Śiva)。

भोगेनby enjoyment/indulgence
भोगेन:
तृप्तिःsatisfaction/contentment
तृप्तिः:
न एव अस्तिis not at all (does not exist)
न एव अस्ति:
विषयाणाम्of sense-objects
विषयाणाम्:
विचारतःupon reflection/discriminative inquiry
विचारतः:
तस्मात्therefore
तस्मात्:
विरागःdispassion/detachment
विरागः:
कर्तव्यःshould be done/ought to be cultivated
कर्तव्यः:
मनसाby the mind
मनसा:
कर्मणाby action/deeds
कर्मणा:
गिराby speech/words
गिरा:

Suta Goswami (narrating Shaiva dharma to the sages at Naimisharanya; ethical instruction within the Linga Purana’s Purva-Bhaga)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It teaches that true readiness for Linga-puja is inner purification: abandoning dependence on sense-pleasures and cultivating vairagya in thought, word, and deed so devotion becomes steady and sattvic.

By implying that finite enjoyments cannot satisfy the soul, it points to Shiva as Pati—the only पूर्ण (complete) reality whose grace and presence alone fulfill the paśu beyond the limits of worldly objects.

It highlights the Pāśupata-oriented discipline of त्रिकरण-शुद्धि (purity of mind, speech, and action), a foundational yogic ethic that supports japa, dhyana, and disciplined Shiva-puja.