Adhyaya 40 — The Yogin’s Impediments (Upasargas), Subtle Concentrations, and the Eight Siddhis
नाशयेच्चित्तमावर्त उपसर्गः स उच्यते ।
एतैर्नाशितयोगास्तु सकला देवयोनयः ॥
nāśayeccittamāvarta upasargaḥ sa ucyate | etairnāśitayogāstu sakalā devayonayaḥ ||
Jener Wirbel, der den Geist zerstört, heißt „Hindernis“ (upasarga). Durch diese ist bei allen Wesen göttlicher Herkunft ihr Yoga zugrunde gegangen.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Spiritual practice is not guaranteed by status: even ‘divine’ births can fail when inner turbulence overwhelms the citta. Vigilance and humility are implied.
Didactic yoga-teaching; not a pañcalakṣaṇa unit. It functions as practical sādhanā guidance embedded in a purāṇic discourse.
The ‘mind-destroying vortex’ points to subtle collapses where the practitioner loses the very instrument of liberation (citta). Obstacles are not merely external; they can de-form the inner organ.