Is that the book of 112 practices that Sarvapriyananda was speaking of in the video? I'm certainly interested in reading those. I would have to look back because I didn't catch the name of the book in my initial viewing.
I certainly have a great deal to learn about Kashmiri Trika Saivism, but a couple of things right of that jumped out at me in the video were that Siva is self-aware, acts, and desires. These contradict the teachings of Advaita, and I've spent some time thinking about these.
The primary thoughts right off is that Siva is citanada, that auspicious consciousness-bliss, so how can that consciousness-bliss be aware of itself? Doesn't awareness of introduce duality? Is that self that Siva is aware of an appearance? In other words, I'm aware of my being, but only from the perspective of vyavaharika. In paramartika, there is no "self" for me to be aware of. Secondly, in my understanding, actions generate karma. If Siva is acting, wouldn't karma be generated? Also, desire in this reality leads to suffering. If Siva desires, does Siva suffer? My initial thought on the last two questions would be that these are Maya.
I'm just wondering how Kashmiri Trika Saivism would answer these questions.