शिवध्यानपूजनवर्णनम्
Description of Śiva Meditation and Worship
समाहितेन मनसा ध्यात्वैवं परमेश्वरम् । आवाहनं स्थापनं च सन्निरोधं निरीक्षणम्
samāhitena manasā dhyātvaivaṃ parameśvaram | āvāhanaṃ sthāpanaṃ ca sannirodhaṃ nirīkṣaṇam
بعقلٍ مجموعٍ ثابت، وبعد التأمّل هكذا في الربّ الأعلى باراميشڤارا (Parameśvara)، يُؤدَّى طقس الآواهَنا (الاستدعاء) وطقس السثاپَنا (إقامته في المقعد أو رمز العبادة)، ثم السَّنّيرودها (الكفّ الباطني) والنِّيريكشَنا (التأمّل المراقِب).
Suta Goswami (narrating Shaiva ritual-yoga instructions as taught in the Kailāsa tradition)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Umāpati
It teaches that Shiva-worship is not merely external ritual: true pūjā begins with samāhita-manas (one-pointed mind), then proceeds through invocation and establishment, culminating in inner restraint and contemplative seeing—aligning the devotee (paśu) toward the Lord (Pati) by loosening bondage (pāśa).
Āvāhana and sthāpana describe the formal approach to Saguna worship—inviting and establishing Parameśvara in the liṅga or altar—while sannirodha and nirīkṣaṇa indicate that the devotee must simultaneously internalize the presence of Shiva through yogic recollection and steady contemplation.
Perform dhyāna first, then āvāhana and sthāpana in liṅga-pūjā; afterward practice sannirodha (withdrawing distractions) and nirīkṣaṇa (steady contemplative attention), ideally supported by japa of the Pañcākṣarī mantra—“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”—and a calm, disciplined posture.