मुनिमोहशमनम्
Pāśupata-yoga, Siddhis, Puruṣa-darśana, Saṃsāra, and Prāṇa-Rudra Pañcāhutī
अपवर्गं ततो गच्छेत् सूक्ष्मं तत्परमं पदम् एवं पाशुपतं योगं ज्ञातव्यं मुनिपुङ्गवाः
apavargaṃ tato gacchet sūkṣmaṃ tatparamaṃ padam evaṃ pāśupataṃ yogaṃ jñātavyaṃ munipuṅgavāḥ
بعد ذلك يمضي «الباشو» (paśu)، أي الكائن المقيَّد، إلى «أبافارغا»—التحرّر—فيبلغ ذلك المقام اللطيف الأسمى. هكذا ينبغي أن يُعرَف «يوغا باشوباتا» (Pāśupata Yoga)، يا أكرم الحكماء.
Suta Goswami (narrating Shaiva doctrine to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames Linga-centered Śaiva practice as a liberating discipline: by following the Pāśupata Yoga of Paśupati, the paśu transcends pāśa and reaches apavarga, the supreme state.
Śiva is implied as Paśupati—the supreme, subtle goal (the ‘paramaṃ padam’) that is not merely a place but the highest ontological state realized when bondage is removed.
Pāśupata Yoga is highlighted as the essential Śaiva method—an inward discipline aligned to Paśupati—whose fruit is apavarga (moksha) and entry into the subtle, supreme abode.