स्कन्दसरः (Skandasara) — तीर्थवर्णनम् / Description of the Skandasara Sacred Lake
सनत्कुमारमासीनं शश्वद्बालवपुर्धरम् । तत्कालमात्रोपरतं समाधेरचलात्मनः
sanatkumāramāsīnaṃ śaśvadbālavapurdharam | tatkālamātroparataṃ samādheracalātmanaḥ
Contemplaron a Sanatkumāra sentado—siempre portando la forma de un joven niño—quien, sólo por aquel instante, se había apartado del samādhi; su ser interior permanecía inmóvil y firme.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Dakṣiṇāmūrti
It presents the ideal Shaiva yogin: one whose consciousness is steady (acala) and who enters samādhi naturally, emerging only as needed—showing mastery over mind and senses while remaining oriented to liberation under Pati (Śiva).
Sanatkumāra’s unwavering samādhi supports the Shaiva path where Saguna worship (Linga, mantra, pūjā) purifies the pashu (bound soul) and leads inward toward the stillness in which Śiva is realized as the supreme Pati beyond agitation.
A practical takeaway is steady dhyāna and mantra-japa—especially pañcākṣarī (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”)—cultivating one-pointedness that matures into samādhi; this can be supported by Shaiva disciplines like bhasma (tripuṇḍra) and rudrākṣa as aids to remembrance.