योगान्तरायाः, औपसर्गिकसिद्धयः, परवैराग्येन शैवप्रसादः
पर्वतादिमहाभारस्कन्धेनोद्वहनं पुनः लघुत्वं च गुरुत्वं च पाणिभ्यां वायुधारणम्
parvatādimahābhāraskandhenodvahanaṃ punaḥ laghutvaṃ ca gurutvaṃ ca pāṇibhyāṃ vāyudhāraṇam
复次,有以肩举负巨重如山者;随意得轻与重;并以双手执持或制御风息。此等皆瑜伽所生之力,而真实之主宰Pati——湿婆(Śiva)——恒为超越一切悉地之至尊。
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages at Naimisharanya)
It frames extraordinary yogic powers as secondary; in Linga worship the devotee turns from siddhi-display to surrender to Śiva as Pati, the Lord who liberates the paśu from pāśa.
By implication, Śiva-tattva is not merely elemental mastery; even control over weight, burden, and wind is a contingent yogic attainment, whereas Śiva is the transcendent ruler of all powers.
It points to yogic siddhis (laghimā, garimā and elemental control of vāyu) that may arise through Pāśupata-oriented discipline, but cautions that liberation comes through devotion and knowledge of Śiva, not through siddhis.