मुनिमोहशमनम्
Pāśupata-yoga, Siddhis, Puruṣa-darśana, Saṃsāra, and Prāṇa-Rudra Pañcāhutī
ऐश्वर्य तत्राष्टगुणमैश्वर्यं योगिनां समुदाहृतम् तत्सर्वं क्रमयोगेन ह्य् उच्यमानं निबोधत
aiśvarya tatrāṣṭaguṇamaiśvaryaṃ yogināṃ samudāhṛtam tatsarvaṃ kramayogena hy ucyamānaṃ nibodhata
في هذا التعليم يُعلَن أن سلطان اليوغيين (aiśvarya) ذو ثمانية أوجه. فافهموه كلَّه، إذ سيُبيَّن على الترتيب بمنهج اليوغا المتدرّجة—تحت رعاية «باتي» (Pati)، الربّ الذي يُرخِي «باشا» (pāśa) قيدَ «باشو» (paśu) النفس المقيّدة.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames yogic “aiśvarya” as an ordered, teachable attainment—implying that true power is subordinate to Shiva (Pati) and should mature through disciplined practice aligned with devotion to the Linga.
By presenting aiśvarya as something to be understood through yoga, it implicitly places Shiva as the supreme Lord (Pati) from whom mastery derives, while the soul (paśu) gains clarity as bondage (pāśa) is progressively weakened.
A step-by-step yoga method (krama-yoga), consistent with Pashupata discipline—systematic practice leading toward the eightfold yogic excellences rather than sudden or ungrounded claims of siddhi.