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Shloka 148

Adhyaya 72 — Puradāha: Rudra’s Cosmic Chariot, Pāśupata-Vrata, and Brahmā’s Shiva-Stuti

प्रत्याहाररतानां च प्रतिस्थानस्थिताय च धारणायै नमस्तुभ्यं धारणाभिरताय ते

pratyāhāraratānāṃ ca pratisthānasthitāya ca dhāraṇāyai namastubhyaṃ dhāraṇābhiratāya te

السجود لك—يا من تُفرِح المولعين ببراتيَاهارا (سحب الحواسّ)؛ يا من تقيم في الأساس الراسخ (براتيشتانا) للثبات؛ وأنتَ نفسُك الدهارانا، إمساكُ الذهن وتركيزه. يا ربّ، لك التحية، يا من تسرّ بالدهارانا؛ يا پَتي، مانحَ السيادة على العقل لفكّ قيودِ البَشو من پاشا.

प्रत्याहार-रतानाम्of those devoted to pratyāhāra (sense-withdrawal)
प्रत्याहार-रतानाम्:
and
:
प्रतिस्थान-स्थितायto the One established in pratiṣṭhāna (firm foundation/steadfast station)
प्रतिस्थान-स्थिताय:
and
:
धारणायैto Dhāraṇā (concentration/holding)
धारणायै:
नमस्salutations
नमस्:
तुभ्यम्to You
तुभ्यम्:
धारणाभिरतायto the One delighting in dhāraṇā
धारणाभिरताय:
तेto You/unto You (O Lord).
ते:

Suta Goswami (narrating a hymn/series of salutations within the Purva-Bhaga discourse)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames Linga-oriented devotion as inner worship: Shiva is praised not only as the outer object of puja but as the very power of pratyāhāra and dhāraṇā that stabilizes the mind for true Linga-dhyāna.

Shiva is presented as Pati—the grounding foundation (pratiṣṭhāna) and the living principle of concentration itself—by whom the paśu (bound soul) gains inner mastery and loosens pāśa (bondage).

Pāśupata-oriented yoga discipline: pratyāhāra (withdrawing the senses from objects) culminating in dhāraṇā (one-pointed holding of awareness), suitable for sustained Linga-meditation.