Śiva–Arjuna Yuddha and the Subjugation of Pride (Śiva-parīkṣā)
अथार्जुनोत्तरे ज्ञात्वा स्मृत्वा शिवपदांबुजम् । दधार पादयोस्तं वै तद्ध्यानादाप्तसद्बलः
athārjunottare jñātvā smṛtvā śivapadāṃbujam | dadhāra pādayostaṃ vai taddhyānādāptasadbalaḥ
ثم إن أرجونا، وقد أدرك الموقف، تذكّر قدمي اللوتس للربّ شيفا؛ وبالقوة الصالحة التي نالها من ذلك التأمل أمسكه بإحكام عند قدميه.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages at Naimisharanya)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Mahadeva
Type: stotra
It teaches that remembrance and meditation on Śiva’s lotus-feet (pati-dhyāna) grants inner, sattvic strength, enabling a devotee to act rightly and steadily even in intense situations—an expression of Śiva’s grace supporting the soul (paśu) toward freedom.
Meditating on Śiva’s ‘lotus-feet’ is Saguna-bhakti: the devotee fixes the mind on Śiva with form and attributes. In practice, this aligns with Linga-worship where the mind is anchored in Śiva’s presence, and strength arises from focused devotion rather than mere physical power.
A clear takeaway is dhyāna and smaraṇa—quietly remembering Śiva (often with the Panchākṣarī, “Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) while visualizing Śiva’s feet or the Linga, so that composure and auspicious strength (sad-bala) arise for disciplined action.