आचार्य-धर्मलक्षण-श्रद्धाभक्तिप्राधान्यं तथा लिङ्गे ध्यान-पूजाविधानसंकेतः
Adhyaya 10
प्रीतितापविषादेभ्यो विनिवृत्तिर्विरक्तता संन्यासः कर्मणां न्यासः कृतानामकृतैः सह
prītitāpaviṣādebhyo vinivṛttirviraktatā saṃnyāsaḥ karmaṇāṃ nyāsaḥ kṛtānāmakṛtaiḥ saha
Dispassion (virakti) is the turning back from delight, torment, and dejection. Saṃnyāsa is the laying down of actions—abandoning both what has been done and what remains undone—so that the bound paśu may loosen the pāśa and turn toward Pati, Lord Śiva.
Suta Goswami (narrating the teaching within the Linga Purana discourse to the sages at Naimisharanya)
It frames true Linga-upāsanā as inner renunciation: withdrawing from emotional extremes and relinquishing doership in karma, which purifies the pashu for steadfast devotion to Pati (Śiva).
By implication, Śiva as Pati is the stable refuge beyond prīti, tāpa, and viṣāda; turning away from these fluctuations is a movement toward Shiva-tattva—unbound, luminous, and liberating.
A Pāśupata-oriented inner discipline: vairāgya and karma-nyāsa (dropping attachment to performed and unperformed acts), supporting meditation and steady Śiva-bhakti rather than mere external rite.