काम्यकर्मविभागः — Taxonomy of Kāmya (Desire-Motivated) Śaiva Rites
ओंकाराख्यमयं चैव हंसशक्त्या समन्वितम् । तथेच्छात्मिकया शक्त्या समारूढांकमंडलम्
oṃkārākhyamayaṃ caiva haṃsaśaktyā samanvitam | tathecchātmikayā śaktyā samārūḍhāṃkamaṃḍalam
Ia berhakikat sebagai Oṁ, dan bersatu dengan Haṁsa-Śakti. Demikian juga, bersemayam di atas icchā-śakti—kuasa Kehendak—Ia menatang maṇḍala yang bercahaya di pangkuan-Nya.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Jyotirlinga: Oṃkāreśvara
Sthala Purana: The verse’s oṃkāra-centric metaphysics resonates with the Omkāra-liṅga tradition: Śiva is contemplated as Oṃ itself, the source of mantra and tattva; in local sthala narratives, the liṅga is revered as self-manifested and especially potent for mantra-siddhi and inner awakening.
Significance: Mantra-japa and prāṇic contemplation (haṃsa) are believed to become steady; worship here is traditionally linked with purification of pāśa (bondage) through śiva-jñāna.
Mantra: oṃ (Oṃkāra); haṃsa (Haṃsa-mantra implied)
Role: teaching
It presents Śiva-tattva as manifesting through Oṁ (the primordial sound) and Śakti, especially the Haṁsa-principle linked with prāṇa, showing how consciousness and divine power unite as the basis for inner realization.
The verse points to a saguna focus for meditation: Oṁ as a perceivable support (ālambana) and the mandala as a visualized divine sphere—both used to approach the transcendent Śiva through mantra and inner iconography, akin to linga-upāsanā that uses form to reach the formless.
Meditation on Oṁ along with haṁsa (the natural mantra of the breath) is implied—linking inhalation/exhalation with awareness and offering the mind into Śiva-Śakti unity; this aligns with Shaiva mantra-japa and prāṇa-sādhana.