मुनिमोहशमनम्
Pāśupata-yoga, Siddhis, Puruṣa-darśana, Saṃsāra, and Prāṇa-Rudra Pañcāhutī
अणिमा लघिमा चैव महिमा प्राप्तिरेव च प्राकाम्यं चैव सर्वत्र ईशित्वं चैव सर्वतः
aṇimā laghimā caiva mahimā prāptireva ca prākāmyaṃ caiva sarvatra īśitvaṃ caiva sarvataḥ
得成阿尼玛(aṇimā,微细化)、拉吉玛(laghimā,轻盈化)、摩希玛(mahimā,广大化)与普拉普提(prāpti,得至);又于一切处得普拉卡米亚(prākāmya,意愿不可阻的圆成),并于诸方面得伊希特瓦(īśitva,主宰权能)——当众生之魂(paśu)由系缚(pāśa)得以松解时,依主宰帕提、湿婆之恩,这些瑜伽神通便随之生起。
Suta Goswami
It frames siddhis as secondary fruits that can arise through Shaiva sādhanā rooted in devotion to the Liṅga—implying that powers come by Śiva’s lordship (Pati) rather than mere technique, and should be subordinated to liberation from pāśa.
By highlighting īśitva (sovereign mastery) as a divine quality, the verse points to Śiva as Pati—the ultimate Lord whose inherent freedom and governance can be reflected in the yogin when bondage is attenuated.
Pāśupata-oriented yoga and inner discipline (yama-niyama, dhyāna, and Śiva-bhakti centered on the Liṅga) are implied as the means by which such siddhis may manifest, while the higher aim remains mokṣa.