मुनिमोहशमनम्
Pāśupata-yoga, Siddhis, Puruṣa-darśana, Saṃsāra, and Prāṇa-Rudra Pañcāhutī
मानुषं भजते नित्यं तस्माद्ध्यानं समाचरेत् चतुर्दशविधं ह्येतद् बुद्ध्वा संसारमण्डलम्
mānuṣaṃ bhajate nityaṃ tasmāddhyānaṃ samācaret caturdaśavidhaṃ hyetad buddhvā saṃsāramaṇḍalam
إن البَشُو المتجسِّد يتعلّق دائماً بالحالة الإنسانية؛ فلذلك ينبغي أن يواظب على الدِّهيانا، التأمّل. فإذا فَهِمَ هذا الماندالا للسَّمسارا ذي الأقسام الأربعة عشر، اتّجه إلى البَتِي—الربّ شِيفا—المتعالي على الباشا (القيود).
Suta Goswami (narrating the teaching as part of the Purva-Bhaga discourse to the sages at Naimisharanya)
It shifts the focus from mere external observance to inner dhyāna: understanding saṃsāra’s repeating cycle is presented as the basis for turning the mind toward Śiva (Pati), which is the inner core of Linga-upāsanā.
Śiva is implied as Pati—the transcendent Lord beyond the saṃsāra-maṇḍala—toward whom the bound pashu turns once the mechanisms of bondage (pasha) are discerned through contemplative knowledge.
Dhyāna (meditative contemplation) is explicitly enjoined—framed as a disciplined practice aligned with Shaiva liberation, where insight into the ‘fourteenfold’ structure of worldly existence supports detachment and inward absorption.