पशु-पाश-पतिविचारः / Inquiry into Paśu, Pāśa, and Pati
सर्वाननशिरोग्रीवः सर्वभूतगुहाशयः । सर्वव्यापी च भगवांस्तस्मात्सर्वगतश्शिवः
sarvānanaśirogrīvaḥ sarvabhūtaguhāśayaḥ | sarvavyāpī ca bhagavāṃstasmātsarvagataśśivaḥ
اُس کے سب چہرے، سب سر اور سب گردنیں ہیں؛ وہ ہر بھوت کے دل کی گُہا میں بستا ہے۔ بھگوان سَروَویَاپی ہے، اسی لیے شِو ‘سَروَگت’ کہلاتا ہے۔
Suta Goswami
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Sthala Purana: A doctrinal ‘viśvarūpa’ description: Śiva as indweller of the heart-cave (guhā) of all beings. In kṣetra traditions, this underwrites the idea that the jyotirliṅga is not merely local but the doorway to the indwelling Lord.
Significance: Encourages internal pilgrimage (antar-yātrā): seeing the same Śiva in one’s own heart and in all beings, cultivating ahiṃsā and universal reverence.
Mantra: sarvānanaśirogrīvaḥ sarvabhūtaguhāśayaḥ | sarvavyāpī ca bhagavāṃs tasmāt sarvagataś śivaḥ
Type: stotra
Role: teaching
It declares Śiva as the omnipresent Pati: He is not confined to one shrine or form but dwells in the “heart-cave” of every being. This supports Shaiva Siddhanta contemplation—recognizing the Lord as immanent and transcendent, the inner ruler who grants liberation when the bonds (pāśa) are removed by grace.
Linga-worship gives a sacred focal point for Saguna devotion, yet the verse teaches that the same Śiva is sarvavyāpī—present within all. The Linga becomes a doorway: by honoring the visible symbol, the devotee learns to perceive the formless, all-pervading Lord who abides in every heart.
A practical takeaway is heart-centered japa and dhyāna: repeat the Pañcākṣarī (“Om Namaḥ Śivāya”) while contemplating Śiva seated in the guhā (inner cave) of the heart as the all-pervading consciousness. This aligns outer worship (Linga, bhasma, rudrākṣa) with inner realization of His omnipresence.