योगान्तरायाः, औपसर्गिकसिद्धयः, परवैराग्येन शैवप्रसादः
क्वचिद्दण्डकबन्धं तु कुर्याद्बन्धं सहस्रशः मृगपक्षिसमूहस्य रुतज्ञानं च विन्दति
kvaciddaṇḍakabandhaṃ tu kuryādbandhaṃ sahasraśaḥ mṛgapakṣisamūhasya rutajñānaṃ ca vindati
A veces, si alguien realiza repetidamente el rito de atadura llamado daṇḍaka‑bandha—una y otra vez, incluso mil veces—alcanza el conocimiento de los gritos y cantos de los grupos de bestias y aves.
Suta Goswami
It cautions that ritual proficiency can yield minor siddhis (like understanding animal and bird calls), but Linga worship ultimately aims at Pati-realization—Śiva’s grace leading beyond powers to liberation.
By implication, Śiva as Pati is the giver of results: siddhis may arise within prakṛtic bondage (pāśa), whereas Śiva-tattva points to the transcendent goal—freedom of the paśu (soul) from bondage, not fascination with powers.
A repeated ‘bandha’ (binding) practice termed daṇḍaka-bandha, presented as a prayoga that produces a limited siddhi—comprehension of the sounds (ruta) of animals and birds.