Why Lord Shiva Reigns as Master of Ghosts, Goblins, and the Forgotten The Cosmic Outcast Who Embraces All In Hindu tradition, Lord Shiva stands apart from conventional divine imagery. While other deities reside in golden palaces, Shiva dwells in cremation grounds, adorned with ashes and serpents. His attendants are not celestial beings but bhuta-ganas—ghosts, spirits, goblins, and entities that society fears and rejects. This extraordinary characteristic reveals profound spiritual truths about divine compassion, social hypocrisy, and the nature of ultimate reality. Lord of the Bhuta-Ganas Shiva's title as Bhuteshwara or Bhutanatha—Lord of Ghosts (also lord of all elements)—is not merely symbolic. The Shiva Purana describes how he deliberately chooses the company of beings rejected by others. His ganas, led by Nandi and including figures like Bhringi and countless unnamed spirits, represent those pushed to society's periphery. These are not evil beings but souls deemed unwor...