शिवध्यानपूजनवर्णनम्
Description of Śiva Meditation and Worship
बालेन्दुमुकुटं सौम्यं त्रिनेत्रं च चतुर्भुजम् । दीप्तशूलमृगीटंकहेमवेत्रधरं विभुम्
bālendumukuṭaṃ saumyaṃ trinetraṃ ca caturbhujam | dīptaśūlamṛgīṭaṃkahemavetradharaṃ vibhum
ພຣະອົງເປັນຈອມເຈົ້າຜູ້ແຜ່ຊາຍທົ່ວທຸກທີ່—ອ່ອນໂຍນ ແລະເປັນມງຄົດ—ສວມມົກຸດເປັນດວງເດືອນເສີຍ; ມີສາມພຣະເນດ ແລະສີ່ພຣະຫັດ; ຖືຕຣິສູນທີ່ສ່ອງໄສ, ມີເຄື່ອງໝາຍຮູບກວາງ, ແລະຖືໄມ້ຄຳ.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Kailasha Samhita teaching to the sages of Naimisharanya)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
Significance: A dhyāna-icon of Śiva (three-eyed, crescent-crowned, trident-bearing) used for internalization of the Lord prior to worship; in Siddhānta, such dhyāna supports removal of āṇava/māyīya obscuration (tirodhāna understood as the veiling power that is transcended through right worship).
Type: stotra
Offering: dhupa
It presents Shiva’s saguna (with attributes) form for dhyāna: the crescent moon and gentle aspect signify grace and coolness; the three eyes indicate transcendent awareness that burns ignorance; the divine weapons symbolize the Lord’s power to cut bondage and protect the devotee on the path to liberation.
While the Linga points to Shiva’s nirguna reality, this verse supports saguna upāsanā—visualizing Shiva’s auspicious form to steady the mind. In Shaiva Siddhanta, both approaches harmonize: form-based devotion ripens the soul toward realizing Shiva beyond form.
Practice Shiva-dhyāna by contemplating this iconography while reciting the Panchakshara mantra (Om Namaḥ Śivāya). A simple supportive discipline is applying Tripuṇḍra (bhasma) and doing japa with Rudrāksha to cultivate steadiness and devotion.