Adhyaya 8: Yogasthanas, Ashtanga Yoga, Pranayama-Siddhi, and Shiva-Dhyana leading to Samadhi
तमः प्रच्छाद्य रजसा रजः सत्त्वेन छादयेत् ततः सत्त्वस्थितो भूत्वा शिवध्यानं समभ्यसेत्
tamaḥ pracchādya rajasā rajaḥ sattvena chādayet tataḥ sattvasthito bhūtvā śivadhyānaṃ samabhyaset
ليُغطِّ التامس بالراجس، ثم ليستر الراجس بالساتفا. فإذا استقرّ في الساتفا، فليواظب على تأمّل شيفا—ذلك البَتي الذي يحرّر البَشو من الباشا.
Suta Goswami (narrating the teaching on Śiva-dhyāna to the sages of Naimiṣāraṇya)
It establishes inner guṇa-śuddhi as the prerequisite for true Liṅga-upāsanā: the devotee refines the mind into sattva so that worship and contemplation can become a direct means for loosening pāśa (bondage) and turning toward Pati, Śiva.
Śiva is implied as the supreme Pati who is fit to be contemplated when the mind is clarified; meditation on Śiva is presented as the culminating practice once obscuring guṇas are subordinated, aligning the paśu toward liberation rather than worldly agitation.
A yogic method of guṇa-transformation leading to Śiva-dhyāna: first overcome tamas through disciplined activity (rajas), then refine rajas into sattva, and finally meditate steadily on Śiva—an inner discipline consistent with Pāśupata-oriented practice.