Kāla-vañcana (Overcoming/Outwitting Time) and the Pañcabhūta Basis of the Body
आकाशस्तु ततो व्यापी सर्वेषां सर्वगः स्थितः । आकाशे तु विलीयंते संभवंति पुनस्ततः
ākāśastu tato vyāpī sarveṣāṃ sarvagaḥ sthitaḥ | ākāśe tu vilīyaṃte saṃbhavaṃti punastataḥ
Después, Ākāśa (espacio/éter) es el principio que todo lo penetra, presente en todas partes y establecido en todo. En Ākāśa los seres se disuelven, y de él vuelven a surgir—según el orden cósmico del Señor.
Lord Shiva (as the philosophical teacher in Umāsaṃhitā, instructing Umā/Devī)
Tattva Level: pasha
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Significance: Supports contemplation on dissolution (laya) and re-emergence under divine order; encourages non-attachment and trust in Śiva’s governance of cycles.
Cosmic Event: cyclic dissolution and re-manifestation (laya-sṛṣṭi cycle)
It presents a key cosmic rhythm: manifestation arises, dissolves, and arises again within the subtle expanse of ākāśa—pointing the seeker toward the deeper truth that all change occurs within a higher, sustaining reality, ultimately grounded in Shiva as Pati (the Lord).
The Linga symbolizes the all-pervading support of existence: just as all beings dissolve into and arise from the subtle field, Saguna Shiva is worshiped as the accessible form of that all-pervading ground, leading the mind toward Shiva’s transcendence beyond the tattvas.
Meditate on Shiva as vyāpaka (all-pervading) while repeating the Panchakshara—“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”—contemplating the arising and dissolving of thoughts into inner space (citta-ākāśa), supported by Tripuṇḍra and Rudrāksha if practiced in your tradition.