Ekādaśāhna-vidhiḥ (The Rite Prescribed for the Eleventh Day): Maṇḍala-racanā, Āvāhana, Mudrā, and Ativāhika-devatā Pūjā
प्राणानायम्य संकल्प्य पूजयित्वा सुरेश्वरी । देवताः पञ्च पूर्वोक्ता अतिवाहिकरूपिणीः
prāṇānāyamya saṃkalpya pūjayitvā sureśvarī | devatāḥ pañca pūrvoktā ativāhikarūpiṇīḥ
يا إلهةَ الآلهة! بعد ضبط نَفَسِ الحياة وإبرام السَّنْكَلْبَة (saṅkalpa) المقدّسة، تُعبَدُ الآلهةُ الخمسةُ المذكورون من قبل، وهم على هيئة «أَتِفاهِكَة» (ativāhika)؛ حَمَلةٌ لطيفون ينقلون القُربانَ والنيّةَ الباطنةَ للمتعبّد.
Lord Shiva
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Shakti Form: Pārvatī
Role: teaching
It teaches that Shaiva worship is not only external ritual: prāṇāyāma (inner purification) and saṅkalpa (right intention) prepare the consciousness so the offering becomes spiritually effective and aligned to Pati (Shiva).
In Linga/Saguna worship, the devotee first steadies prāṇa and fixes intention, then performs pūjā through prescribed divine agencies; this underscores that the Linga ritual is a bridge where inner discipline supports outer worship.
Begin with prāṇāyāma and a clear saṅkalpa before pūjā; then worship the prescribed deities as subtle carriers of the rite—ideally alongside Shaiva supports like mantra-japa (e.g., Om Namaḥ Śivāya) where applicable.