एकार्णव-सृष्टिक्रमः, ब्रह्म-विष्णु-परस्परप्रवेशः, शिवस्य आगमनं च
लब्धो नाभिप्रदेशेन पद्मसूत्राद्विनिर्गमः मा भूत्ते मनसो ऽल्पो ऽपि व्याघातो ऽयं कथंचन
labdho nābhipradeśena padmasūtrādvinirgamaḥ mā bhūtte manaso 'lpo 'pi vyāghāto 'yaṃ kathaṃcana
“Se ha logrado la salida del tallo de loto por la región del ombligo. Que no surja en tu mente ni la más leve turbación—que este obstáculo no acontezca de modo alguno.”
Suta Goswami (narrating a cosmogonic episode involving Brahma’s emergence)
It links cosmic emergence (the lotus-stalk from the navel) with inner discipline: Linga worship is not only external ritual but also steadiness of mind, removing vyāghāta (hindrance) so the devotee (paśu) can approach Pati (Shiva) beyond bondage (pāśa).
By emphasizing the cessation of mental disturbance, it implies Shiva-tattva as the stabilizing Pati—pure consciousness that removes obstacles and supports orderly manifestation, even when the narrative uses Brahma’s lotus-emergence imagery.
A yogic takeaway: cultivate unwavering mental focus (citta-sthairya) and avoid vyāghāta; this aligns with Pāśupata-oriented practice where obstacles are overcome through devotion, restraint, and single-pointed contemplation of Shiva/Linga.