Adhyaya 72 — Puradāha: Rudra’s Cosmic Chariot, Pāśupata-Vrata, and Brahmā’s Shiva-Stuti
योगिनां हृदि संस्थाय सदा नीवारशूकवत् प्रत्याहाराय ते नित्यं प्रत्याहाररताय ते
yogināṃ hṛdi saṃsthāya sadā nīvāraśūkavat pratyāhārāya te nityaṃ pratyāhāraratāya te
Morando en el corazón de los yoguis, siempre sutil como la punta de la cáscara del arroz silvestre, Śiva los conduce sin cesar al pratyāhāra, el retiro de los sentidos, pues están siempre entregados a esa retirada interior.
Suta Goswami
It internalizes Linga-upāsanā: the true mark (liṅga) is Śiva’s subtle presence in the yogin’s heart, realized through pratyāhāra rather than only external ritual.
Śiva-tattva is portrayed as antaryāmin (inner indweller)—extremely subtle and intimate—guiding the paśu (bound soul) away from pasha (sense-bondage) toward Pati (the Lord) through inward withdrawal.
Pratyāhāra (withdrawal of the senses) is highlighted as a key limb of Pāśupata-oriented yoga, enabling the mind to turn from external objects toward Śiva’s inner presence.