अकारः सर्ववर्णाग्र्यः प्रकाशः परमः शिवः । हकारो व्योमरूपः स्याच्छक्त्यात्मा संप्रकीर्तितः
akāraḥ sarvavarṇāgryaḥ prakāśaḥ paramaḥ śivaḥ | hakāro vyomarūpaḥ syācchaktyātmā saṃprakīrtitaḥ
The syllable “A”—foremost among all sounds—is the supreme Light, Paramashiva Himself. The syllable “Ha” is said to be of the nature of space (vyoma) and is proclaimed as the very essence of Shakti.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Mantra: akāraḥ ... paramaḥ śivaḥ | hakāro ... śaktyātmā
Type: stotra
Shakti Form: Pārvatī
Role: creative
It teaches that sacred sound (varṇa) is not merely linguistic: ‘A’ signifies Paramashiva as pure luminous consciousness (prakāśa), while ‘Ha’ signifies Shakti as the subtle expanse (vyoma) in which manifestation and mantra-resonance unfold—pointing to the inseparability of Pati (Shiva) and His Shakti.
Linga-worship trains the mind to recognize the formless supreme reality through a sacred form; this verse complements that by showing how the same supreme is approached through mantra and sound-symbolism—Shiva as the illuminating principle and Shakti as the all-pervading field—supporting Saguna worship that leads toward Nirguna realization.
Mantra-japa with contemplative bhāvanā: while repeating Shiva-mantras (especially the Panchakshara, “Om Namaḥ Śivāya”), meditate that Shiva is the inner light (prakāśa) and Shakti is the subtle space of awareness (vyoma) in which the mantra arises and dissolves; this aligns japa with yogic inwardness.