त्रिपुरवर्णनम् (Tripura-varṇanam) — “Description of Tripura”
महाप्रतापपतितास्सर्वेप्यासन् सुमूर्छिताः । वर्षासु गतसंत्रासा वृष्टिं मूर्द्धन्यधारयन्
mahāpratāpapatitāssarvepyāsan sumūrchitāḥ | varṣāsu gatasaṃtrāsā vṛṣṭiṃ mūrddhanyadhārayan
被那炽盛无比的大神威所击倒,众人尽皆仆地,昏厥失识。又如雨季遭逢暴雨之人,恐惧渐息,只得任凭雨注倾落于头顶。
Sūta Gosvāmin (narrating to the sages at Naimiṣāraṇya)
Tattva Level: pashu
It portrays how finite beings collapse before overwhelming divine śakti (pratāpa). In Shaiva Siddhānta, such “falling unconscious” symbolizes the ego’s defeat, where fear and agitation subside when one is overpowered by the reality of Pati (Śiva).
The imagery of irresistible pratāpa reflects Saguna Śiva’s manifest power that devotees approach through accessible forms—especially the Śiva-liṅga. Worship trains the mind to endure life’s ‘downpours’ with steadiness, recognizing Śiva as the sustaining Lord behind all forces.
A practical takeaway is cultivating kṣamā (endurance) and śaraṇāgati (surrender) through daily japa of the Pañcākṣarī—“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”—and steady dhyāna on Śiva’s presence, so fear ‘passes away’ like rainclouds after a storm.