Adhyaya 8: Yogasthanas, Ashtanga Yoga, Pranayama-Siddhi, and Shiva-Dhyana leading to Samadhi
साक्षात्समरसेनैव देहमध्ये स्मरेच्छिवम् एकीभावं समेत्यैवं तत्र यद्रससम्भवम्
sākṣātsamarasenaiva dehamadhye smarecchivam ekībhāvaṃ sametyaivaṃ tatra yadrasasambhavam
By immediate, undivided sameness (samarasa), one should remember Śiva within this very body. Having thus entered into oneness (ekībhāva), whatever bliss-essence (rasa) is born there—know it as the arising of Śiva-consciousness, wherein the Paśu (soul) moves toward the Pati (Lord) by loosening the bonds (pāśa).
Suta Goswami (narrating the yogic teaching within the Linga Purana discourse)
It shifts Linga worship from only outer ritual to inner realization: the true Linga is contemplated within the body as Śiva, and worship culminates in ekībhāva—non-dual absorption in Śiva-consciousness.
Śiva-tattva is indicated as direct inner presence realized through samarasa (undivided awareness), manifesting as rasa—an experiential bliss-essence that arises when the Paśu approaches the Pati beyond bondage (pāśa).
A dhyāna-based Pāśupata-oriented practice: remembering Śiva in the body, stabilizing equal awareness (samarasa), and entering ekībhāva, where the practitioner tastes the arising rasa of Śiva-realization.