Praṇava-Māhātmya and the Twofold Mantra (Sūkṣma–Sthūla) in Śaiva Sādhanā
अकारश्च उकारश्च मकारश्च ततः परम् । बिंदुनादयुतं तद्धि शब्दकालकलान्वितम्
akāraśca ukāraśca makāraśca tataḥ param | biṃdunādayutaṃ taddhi śabdakālakalānvitam
‘அ’, ‘உ’, ‘ம’—இவற்றிற்கும் அப்பாற்பட்ட பிரணவம்—பிந்து, நாதம் இணைந்ததாகவும், சப்தம், காலம், கலா-சக்தி உடையதாகவும் உள்ளது।
Suta Goswami (narrating Shiva’s doctrine of Praṇava as taught in the Vidyeśvara context)
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
It defines Praṇava (Om) as not merely A-U-M, but as the living mantric form endowed with bindu and nāda—point and resonance—through which consciousness, time, and divine power (kalā) become spiritually accessible for liberation-oriented meditation.
In Śaiva practice, the Liṅga is worshipped with mantra as Śiva’s audible form (śabda-brahman). This verse explains Om as a complete mantric body—A-U-M plus bindu-nāda—supporting Saguna worship (ritual recitation, japa) while pointing to the transcendent ‘beyond’ (tataḥ param) of Nirguṇa Śiva.
Praṇava-japa with inner listening to nāda: chant Om (or prefix it to ‘Om Namaḥ Śivāya’), then contemplate the bindu as a steady point of awareness and the nāda as subtle resonance, aligning breath and attention for Śiva-dhyāna.