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Shloka 151

Adhyaya 72 — Puradāha: Rudra’s Cosmic Chariot, Pāśupata-Vrata, and Brahmā’s Shiva-Stuti

समाधानाभिगम्याय समाधानाय ते नमः समाधानरतानां तु निर्विकल्पार्थरूपिणे

samādhānābhigamyāya samādhānāya te namaḥ samādhānaratānāṃ tu nirvikalpārtharūpiṇe

समाधानाभिगम्याय समाधानाय ते नमः। समाधानरतानां तु निर्विकल्पार्थरूपिणे॥

samādhāna-abhigamyāyato Him who is approachable/attainable through samādhāna (deep collectedness)
samādhāna-abhigamyāya:
samādhānāyato Him who is samādhāna itself (the state/principle of inner equipoise)
samādhānāya:
teto You
te:
namaḥsalutation
namaḥ:
samādhāna-ratānāmof those delighting in/steadfast in samādhāna
samādhāna-ratānām:
tuindeed
tu:
nirvikalpa-artha-rūpiṇeto Him whose essential nature is the object/meaning that is nirvikalpa (free of mental alternatives and conceptualization)
nirvikalpa-artha-rūpiṇe:

Suta Goswami (narrating a stotra-style passage within the Linga Purana’s Shaiva teaching context)

S
Shiva

FAQs

It frames Linga worship as incomplete without inner samādhāna: the Linga points to Shiva as Pati, who is finally known when the mind becomes collected and non-conceptual (nirvikalpa).

Shiva is presented as both the goal reached through samādhāna and the very essence of samādhāna—revealed to yogins as nirvikalpa-artha, Reality beyond mental constructions, the Pati who transcends pasha (bondage).

The highlighted practice is yogic samādhāna leading toward nirvikalpa realization—aligned with Pāśupata discipline where the pashu (soul) loosens pasha through focused absorption in Shiva.