Brahmā’s Yogic Vision of Sadyōjāta in the Śvetalohita Kalpa
तस्माद्विश्वेश्वरं देवं ये प्रपद्यन्ति वै द्विजाः प्राणायामपरा भूत्वा ब्रह्मतत्परमानसाः
tasmādviśveśvaraṃ devaṃ ye prapadyanti vai dvijāḥ prāṇāyāmaparā bhūtvā brahmatatparamānasāḥ
Ainsi, les dvija qui prennent refuge en Viśveśvara, le Dieu Seigneur de l’univers, voués au prāṇāyāma et l’esprit fixé sur le Brahman suprême, se tournent vers le Pati (Śiva) comme moyen certain d’assouplir le pāśa, le lien qui enchaîne le paśu, l’âme individuelle.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)
It links outer devotion (śaraṇāgati to Viśveśvara/Śiva) with inner worship through prāṇāyāma, implying that true Linga-oriented devotion culminates in yogic centering and surrender to Pati.
Śiva is presented as Viśveśvara—the universal Lord—and as the Supreme Brahman to be realized by a mind fixed on ultimate Reality, consistent with Shaiva Siddhānta’s Pati as the highest principle.
Prāṇāyāma is highlighted as the key yogic discipline, paired with surrender and Brahman-contemplation—an inner Pāśupata-oriented method for weakening pāśa (bondage).