Adhyāya 240: Indriya–Manas–Buddhi–Ātman — The Inner Hierarchy and Restraint (इन्द्रिय-मनस्-बुद्धि-आत्म-क्रमः)
सत्त्वसंसेवनाद धीरो निद्रामुच्छेत्तुमरहति । विद्वानोंने योगके जो काम
sattvasaṃsevanād dhīro nidrām ucchettum arhati | vidvān yoge ye kāma-krodha-lobha-bhayaṃ pañcamaṃ svapnam iti pañca doṣān āhuḥ, tān sarvathā samucchedayet | teṣu krodhaṃ śamena (manonigrahena) jayet, kāmaṃ saṅkalpatyāgena parājayet; tathā dhīraḥ sattvaguṇasaṃsevanena nidrām ucchettum arhati |
قال فياسا: بتنمية السَّتْفَة يغدو ذو الثبات قادراً على قطع النوم. والحكماء، إذ يتحدثون عن اليوغا، يذكرون خمس آفات: الشهوة، والغضب، والطمع، والخوف، والخامسة النوم/الحُلْم. ويجب اقتلاعها كلها اقتلاعاً تامّاً. فمنها يُقهَر الغضب بضبط النفس الهادئ، وتُغلَب الشهوة بترك العزم القهري ومقاصد التعلّق؛ وكذلك، بممارسة السَّتْفَة يقدر العازم على قهر النوم.
व्यास उवाच
Yoga requires uprooting five inner obstacles—desire, anger, greed, fear, and sleep/dreaming. Anger is mastered through śama (calm restraint of mind), desire through saṅkalpa-tyāga (dropping craving-driven intentions), and sleep is overcome by cultivating sattva (clarity and balance).
In the didactic discourse of Śānti Parva, Vyāsa instructs on inner discipline: he lists specific psychological faults recognized by the wise in yogic practice and prescribes concrete methods to conquer them, emphasizing sattva as the basis for vigilance and self-mastery.