ब्रह्मकृत-ईशानस्तवः तथा विश्वरूपदेवी-प्रकृतिरहस्योपदेशः
शुद्धस्फटिकसंकाशं सर्वाभरणभूषितम् अथ तं मनसा ध्यात्वा युक्तात्मा वै पितामहः
śuddhasphaṭikasaṃkāśaṃ sarvābharaṇabhūṣitam atha taṃ manasā dhyātvā yuktātmā vai pitāmahaḥ
Ang banal na anyong iyon ay nagniningning na tila dalisay na kristal at pinalamutian ng lahat ng alahas. Pagkaraan, si Pitāmaha (Brahmā), na ang loob ay nakayuko sa yoga, ay nagmuni-muni sa Kanya sa isipan at nagbulay-bulay nang taimtim.
Suta Goswami (narrating the Purāṇic account; internal action attributed to Brahmā/Pitāmaha)
It emphasizes mānasa-pūjā (inner worship): before external rites, the devotee—here Brahmā—stabilizes the mind and contemplates the pure, luminous form, aligning the pashu (individual soul) toward Pati (Śiva).
Śiva is indicated as śuddha (untainted) and self-luminous like crystal, suggesting nirdoṣatva (faultlessness) and prakāśa (radiant consciousness) that can be apprehended through dhyāna when the mind becomes yuktātmā (yoga-integrated).
Manasā-dhyāna—focused meditation with a collected, yoked mind (yuktātmā)—a core preparatory discipline aligned with Pāśupata-oriented inner concentration preceding or accompanying Linga-pūjā.