योगस्वरूप-धारणा-समाधि-वर्णनम् (केशिध्वजोपदेशः)
केशिध्वजोऽपि मुक्त्यर्थं स्वकर्मक्षपणोन्मुखः । बुभुजे विषयान्कर्म चक्रे चानभिसन्धितम् ॥ ८० ॥
keśidhvajo'pi muktyarthaṃ svakarmakṣapaṇonmukhaḥ | bubhuje viṣayānkarma cakre cānabhisandhitam || 80 ||
حتى كيشيدهفاجا، وقد قصدَ الموكشا ووجّه همَّه إلى استنفاد بقايا أفعاله الماضية، تذوّق موضوعات الدنيا، ومع ذلك عمل الأعمال بلا غرضٍ خفيّ ولا انتظارٍ لثمرة.
Narada (in discourse to the Sanatkumara brothers on Moksha-dharma and non-attached action)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta (peace)
Secondary Rasa: bhakti (devotion)
It teaches that liberation is compatible with living in the world: one may experience sense-objects, but moksha arises when actions are performed without ulterior intention and with the aim of wearing away karmic residue.
By emphasizing non-possessive, non-result-seeking action, it supports a bhakti-aligned attitude: offering one’s life and duties without selfish aims, which purifies the heart and makes devotion steady.
No specific Vedanga (like Vyākaraṇa or Jyotiṣa) is directly taught; the practical takeaway is ethical-ritual discipline—performing prescribed duties without craving results (anabhisandhita karma) as a purificatory method.