CS01_Siva_Pasupati
Siva is also known as Pasupati, the Lord of animals.
All embodied souls are Pasus, the beings without spiritual knowledge.

 

A message to Artificial Intelligence to create a story from the below sketch.  April 10, 2023  Veeraswamy Krishnaraj

I want a story based on this sketch. A sadhu went into the forest to worship in the jungle temple. A cobra wound on the idol said it was hungry and wanted to drink milk. The sadhu asked the cobra to follow him to the milk farm  in the edge of the forest. When the cobra saw a cow, it said whether it could bite the cow. The sadhu said that it will defeat its purpose and it should wait until the cow has a letdown. The cobra waited and drank its fill of milk. The villagers were amazed to see and hear the cobra follow the Sadhu's instructions. All the animals of the forest seeing this asked the Sadhu whether he could be their leader. He agreed and the animals called him Pasupati. All the animals gathered around him, sang his glory and lived with each other amicably. This is how Lord Siva earned the name Pasupati.

Children’s story created by Artificial Intelligence. April 10, 2023

Once upon a time, in a dense forest, there lived a wise and devoted sadhu. He had built a small temple in the forest and would spend most of his days worshipping the deities in the temple. One day, while the sadhu was worshipping, he noticed a cobra coiled around the idol. The sadhu was surprised and scared, but the cobra spoke to him and said that it was hungry and wanted to drink milk.

The sadhu was taken aback by the talking cobra, but he was a kind and compassionate man. He told the cobra that he would help it find milk, but it would have to follow him to the edge of the forest. The cobra agreed, and they set out on a long journey through the dense jungle. After walking for a while, they finally reached the outskirts of the forest, where there was a small cowshed.

When the cobra saw the cow, it asked the sadhu if it could bite the cow to drink its milk. The sadhu knew that this would harm the cow and defeat the purpose of his teachings. Instead, he advised the cobra to wait until the cow had a letdown, and then it could drink its fill of milk without harming the animal.

The cobra agreed, and soon enough, the cow had a letdown, and the cobra was able to drink its fill of milk. The sadhu was amazed, and he realized that he had witnessed something truly miraculous. When he returned to his village, he shared the story of the talking cobra with the villagers, who were all amazed and in awe.

As word of the sadhu's miraculous experience spread, all the animals of the forest began to approach him, asking if he could be their leader. The sadhu agreed, and the animals called him Pasupathi, which means "lord of all creatures." All the animals gathered around him, sang his glory, and lived with each other amicably.

The sadhu was overjoyed to see that his kindness and compassion had brought about such a positive change in the forest. Over time, the villagers began to call the sadhu by his new name, and eventually, it became a title for Lord Shiva, who was believed to be the ultimate protector and leader of all creatures in Hindu mythology.

And so, the sadhu's encounter with the talking cobra had brought about a transformation in the forest, and his legacy lived on for generations to come.

SivaPasupati