ग्रहसंख्यावर्णनम् — ध्रुवस्य तपोबलात् ध्रुवस्थानप्राप्तिः
संतप्तहृदयो भूत्वा मम शोकं करिष्यसि स्वस्थस्थानं ध्रुवं पुत्र स्वशक्त्या त्वं समाप्नुयाः
saṃtaptahṛdayo bhūtvā mama śokaṃ kariṣyasi svasthasthānaṃ dhruvaṃ putra svaśaktyā tvaṃ samāpnuyāḥ
With a heart scorched by anguish, you will become the cause of my sorrow. Yet, O son, by your own inner power you shall surely attain your firm, rightful station—your stable abode.
Suta Goswami (narrating an internal admonition from an elder to a son within the Purva-bhaga narrative)
It frames Linga-centered Shaiva practice as a movement from grief and instability to a dhruva (firm) state—symbolically aligning the pashu (soul) with the steadiness of the Linga through disciplined effort and devotion.
Shiva-tattva is implied as the principle of unwavering stability (dhruvatva) and rightful order; the soul’s ‘stable station’ is attained when bondage-born agitation subsides and consciousness becomes steady under Pati’s governance.
A direct ritual is not stated; the emphasis is Yogic—cultivating inner śakti (self-discipline, steadiness, dhāraṇā) so the pashu can overcome pāśa (sorrow-bound agitation) and reach a stable state fit for Shiva’s path.