Adhyaya 35 — दधीचि-क्षुप-युद्धम्, भार्गवोपदेशः, मृतसंजीवनी (त्र्यम्बक) मन्त्रः
स्वाध्यायेन च योगेन ध्यानेन च यजामहे सत्येनानेन मुक्षीयान् मृत्युपाशाद् भवः स्वयम्
svādhyāyena ca yogena dhyānena ca yajāmahe satyenānena mukṣīyān mṛtyupāśād bhavaḥ svayam
سوادھیائے، یوگ اور دھیان کے ذریعے ہم پروردگار کی عبادت کرتے ہیں۔ اسی سچائی کے زور سے خود بھَو (شیو) ہمیں موت کے پھندے (مرتْیو پاش) سے رہائی دے۔
Suta Goswami (narrating the Shaiva teaching as a liberating prayer to Shiva)
It frames worship as both outer reverence and inner sādhana—svādhyāya, yoga, and dhyāna—so the devotee approaches the Linga not merely ritually but as a path to liberation by Shiva’s grace.
Shiva is invoked as Bhava, the Pati (Lord) who alone can cut the pasha—here, the mṛtyu-pāśa—showing Him as the liberator beyond death and the ultimate refuge for the pashu (bound soul).
A triad of practice: svādhyāya (mantra/scriptural recitation), yoga (discipline of union and restraint), and dhyāna (single-pointed meditation), presented as an integrated Pāśupata-oriented means for release from bondage.