अन्तराय-उपसर्ग-विवेचनम् / Analysis of Yogic Obstacles (Antarāyas) and Upasargas
द्विदलेषोडशारे वा द्वादशारे यथाविधि । दशारे वा षडस्रे वा चतुरस्रे शिवं स्मरेत्
dvidaleṣoḍaśāre vā dvādaśāre yathāvidhi | daśāre vā ṣaḍasre vā caturasre śivaṃ smaret
Dans un lotus à deux pétales et seize rayons, ou dans un lotus à douze rayons selon la règle prescrite—ou encore à dix rayons, ou dans un hexagone, ou dans un carré—qu’on médite sur le Seigneur Śiva.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Īśāna
The verse teaches that Śiva (Pati) is to be contemplated through disciplined dhyāna using sacred geometric supports; the form (lotus, spokes, hexagon, square) is a meditative aid, while the goal is steady remembrance of Śiva leading the bound soul (paśu) beyond bonds (pāśa) toward liberation.
It aligns with Saguna-upāsanā: the practitioner visualizes Śiva within structured yantra-like forms as a support for concentration, similar to how the Liṅga serves as a concrete focus through which one approaches the transcendent Śiva.
Yantra-supported dhyāna: sit with mantra-japa (commonly the Pañcākṣarī, “Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) and mentally place Śiva in a chosen geometric locus (lotus/spoked wheel/hexagon/square) as prescribed, sustaining one-pointed remembrance.