शैवधर्मप्रशंसा तथा पञ्चविधसाधनविभागः / Praise of Śaiva Dharma and the Fivefold Classification of Practice
नाभौ चाष्टाहुतीर्हुत्वा पूर्णाहुत्या नमस्ततः । अष्टपुष्पप्रदानेन कृत्वाभ्यर्चनमंतिमम्
nābhau cāṣṭāhutīrhutvā pūrṇāhutyā namastataḥ | aṣṭapuṣpapradānena kṛtvābhyarcanamaṃtimam
Having offered eight oblations into the navel as the inner altar, and then, with the concluding full oblation, bowing in reverence, one should complete the final worship by offering eight flowers—thus sealing the rite of adoration to Lord Śiva.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Offering: pushpa
It teaches that Śiva-worship is both ritual and inward: the “navel” functions as an inner altar, and the structured offerings culminate in a complete surrender (namas) that seals devotion and steadies the mind toward Śiva, the Pati.
The sequence mirrors Linga-pūjā’s completion rites (final oblation and flower offering), while also pointing to Saguna worship internalized through yogic concentration—seeing Śiva’s presence both in the icon/linga and within the subtle centers.
Offer a measured set of oblations (symbolically eight) with a concluding pūrṇāhuti, then complete worship with eight flowers—paired with a final namas; meditative takeaway: focus awareness at the navel-center while repeating Śiva-mantra (e.g., the Pañcākṣarī).