Adhyāya 199: Karma–Jñāna Causality and the Nirguṇa Brahman
Manu’s Instruction
मनसश्न समाधि वर्धेताहरह:ः शुभे । सावित्रीदेवीके ऐसा कहनेपर वह धर्मात्मा ब्राह्मण बोला--'शुभे! इस मन्त्रके जपमें मेरी यह इच्छा बराबर बढ़ती रहे और मेरे मनकी एकाग्रता भी प्रतिदिन बढ़े”
manasaś ca samādhiṃ vardhetāhar-ahaḥ śubhe | amṛtāc cāmṛtaṃ prāptaḥ śāntībhūto nirātmavān | brahmabhūtaḥ sa nirdvandvaḥ sukhī śāntaḥ nirāmayaḥ ||
Bhishma said: “O auspicious one, may my resolve for meditative absorption grow day by day.” Having attained the ‘nectar’ that surpasses ordinary attainments—indeed, having reached an even higher nectar—he becomes pacified and desireless, free of ego-sense, beyond the pairs of opposites, happy, established in peace, and untouched by illness and sorrow, abiding in the state of Brahman.
भीष्म उवाच
Daily cultivation of mental one-pointedness (samādhi) ripens into liberation: freedom from ego-sense, transcendence of dualities, and abiding peace—described as attaining the highest ‘amṛta’ and becoming brahmabhūta.
Within Bhīṣma’s discourse, a dharmic brāhmaṇa responds (addressing an auspicious goddess, identified in the Hindi gloss as Sāvitrī Devī) with a wish that his mantra-practice and concentration increase each day; the result is then described as the attainment of the supreme deathless state and Brahman-abidance.