The Sri Rudram begins not with flattery but with bold directness: 'Salutation to your wrath, Rudra.' This is striking. Most hymns begin by praising a deity's beauty or benevolence. Sri Rudram begins by addressing the most fearsome aspect — Rudra's anger and arrows — and bowing to it.
This is the Vedic understanding of the divine: it includes the storm, the destruction, the fierceness. Rudra is not only the healer and the gentle one (Shiva) — he is also the one who wields the bow, whose arrows bring fever and calamity. The Vedic worshipper faces this fully and offers salutation to all of it.
Bowing to what frightens us — rather than looking away — is a profound act of acceptance. The Sri Rudram is both a prayer for protection and a deep act of spiritual courage.