Vāyu-jaya (Prāṇa-vijaya) and Yogic Mastery over Time — वायुजय (प्राणविजय) तथा कालजय
कारणप्रशमावेशं परकायप्रवेशनम् । अणिमादिगुणावाप्तिर्मनसा चावलोकनम्
kāraṇapraśamāveśaṃ parakāyapraveśanam | aṇimādiguṇāvāptirmanasā cāvalokanam
કારણવૃત્તિઓ શમન પામે તેવી અવસ્થામાં પ્રવેશ, પરકાયાપ્રવેશ, અણિમા વગેરે ગુણોની પ્રાપ્તિ, અને મનથી (દૂર/સૂક્ષ્મનું) અવલોકન—આ અહીં કહેલી યોગસિદ્ધિઓ છે।
Lord Shiva (teaching Uma/Parvati in the Umāsaṃhitā’s yogic-philosophical discourse)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Significance: Catalogues siddhis that can arise on the path; in Siddhānta framing, such powers belong to the bound soul’s experiential field and can reinforce bondage if mistaken for mokṣa—hence they are spiritually ambivalent.
Shakti Form: Pārvatī
Role: teaching
The verse lists classic yogic siddhis and inner attainments, but in a Shaiva Siddhanta lens they are secondary—useful signs of concentration, yet not the final goal; the higher aim is Shiva-realization (Pati) and release from bonds (pāśa).
Such powers arise from deep meditation and one-pointedness, which Shaiva practice directs toward Saguna Shiva—often through Linga-upasana, mantra-japa, and dhyāna—so that devotion and grace mature into knowledge, rather than fascination with siddhis.
A practical takeaway is disciplined dhyāna and mantra-japa (especially the Panchakshara, “Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) with purity and restraint; traditional supports like bhasma (tripuṇḍra) and rudrākṣa may be used to steady the mind, while remaining detached from siddhi-display.