योगान्तरायाः, औपसर्गिकसिद्धयः, परवैराग्येन शैवप्रसादः
तत्तद्रसान्वितं तस्य त्रयाणां देहधारणम् भाण्डं विनाथ हस्तेन जलपिण्डस्य धारणम्
tattadrasānvitaṃ tasya trayāṇāṃ dehadhāraṇam bhāṇḍaṃ vinātha hastena jalapiṇḍasya dhāraṇam
Dotado de sus esencias (rasas) respectivas, él se vuelve el sostén que porta los cuerpos de los tres (mundos/estados). Y, sin recipiente alguno, con su propia mano mantiene unida la masa de agua; así también el Pati sostiene la existencia encarnada por su poder soberano.
Suta Goswami (narrating the cosmological teaching to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It frames Shiva as the unseen support (ādhāra) of embodied existence; Linga-puja honors that formless sustaining power that holds the worlds and the elements together.
Shiva-tattva is presented as Pati—independent and self-sufficient—able to uphold the ‘mass of water’ without an external container, symbolizing his non-dependent sovereignty over Pasha-bound embodiment.
The imagery aligns with dhāraṇā (holding/steadying): in Pashupata-oriented contemplation, the sādhaka meditates on Shiva as the inner support that stabilizes body, breath, and mind beyond material props.