ध्यानयोगेन रुद्रदर्शनम् — रुद्रावतार-परिवर्तक्रमः, लकुली (कायावतार), पाशुपतयोगः, लिङ्गार्चन-निष्ठा
लम्बोदरश् च लम्बाक्षो लम्बकेशः प्रलम्बकः प्राप्य माहेश्वरं योगं रुद्रलोकं गता हि ते
lambodaraś ca lambākṣo lambakeśaḥ pralambakaḥ prāpya māheśvaraṃ yogaṃ rudralokaṃ gatā hi te
Lambodara, Lambākṣa, Lambakeśa und Pralambaka—nachdem sie den Māheśvara-Yoga erlangt hatten—gingen wahrlich nach Rudraloka, in Rudras göttliches Reich.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It emphasizes the fruit of steadfast Shiva-orientation (Māheśvara-yoga): the devotee (pashu) purified of pasha attains Shiva’s sphere (Rudraloka), implying that Linga-upāsanā culminates in proximity to Pati, not merely worldly merit.
Shiva is implied as Pati—the sovereign Lord whose own yoga (Māheśvara) is a distinct liberating path and whose realm (Rudraloka) is attained by those aligned with his tattva through discipline and grace.
Māheśvara Yoga—i.e., Shaiva/Pāśupata-oriented yogic discipline centered on Rudra-Shiva—presented as the direct means by which devotees transcend bondage and attain Rudra’s loka.