Vāyu-jaya (Prāṇa-vijaya) and Yogic Mastery over Time — वायुजय (प्राणविजय) तथा कालजय
पिबन्ननुदिनं योगी न मृत्युवशगो भवेत् । दिव्यकायो महातेजाः पिपासा क्षुद्विवर्जितः
pibannanudinaṃ yogī na mṛtyuvaśago bhavet | divyakāyo mahātejāḥ pipāsā kṣudvivarjitaḥ
இவ்வாறு தினந்தோறும் அதை அருந்தும் யோகி மரணத்தின் ஆட்சிக்குள் அகப்படான். அவன் தெய்வீக உடலைப் பெற்று, மாபெரும் ஒளியுடன், தாகமும் பசியும் அற்றவனாகிறான்.
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Mahādeva
It teaches that steady daily yogic discipline (supported by Shiva’s grace) weakens the bondage of kāla (death/time) and transforms the seeker toward a divinized, luminous state beyond ordinary bodily compulsions.
In the Uma Samhita’s Shaiva frame, such yogic attainments are not mere physical feats but fruits of alignment with Shiva as Pati; Linga/Saguna Shiva worship stabilizes devotion and purity that support inner yoga and liberation from mortality’s fear.
The verse emphasizes a consistent daily practice—regular intake/observance tied to yogic discipline—best supported by Shaiva sādhanā such as japa of the Panchakshara (Om Namaḥ Śivāya) and meditation on Shiva’s presence.