The Guru Who Was Born of the Disciple: Shiva, Skanda, and the Mystery of the Pranava Among the many iconographic forms that emerge from the living tradition of Shaiva worship, few are as philosophically arresting as the Shishyabhava Murti — the form in which Shiva himself assumes the posture and disposition of a student. Here, the Destroyer of the three cities, the Mahayogi of Kailasha, the source from whom all knowledge ultimately flows, is depicted seated in reverence before his own son, Skanda, who occupies the elevated seat of the Guru. This is not a contradiction but a teaching — one of the most profound that the Shaiva tradition has ever encoded into stone and bronze. The Iconographic Form In the Shishyabhava Murti, Shiva is depicted as four-armed. His upper two hands carry the parashu, the axe that severs the bonds of ego and attachment, and the mriga, the deer that symbolises the restless, leaping mind. These two attributes remind the devotee that even as Shiva comes as a s...