Śuka’s Guṇa-Transcendence and Vyāsa’s Consolation (शुकगति-वर्णनम्)
प्रिय अथवा अप्रियमें, दुर्बल अथवा बलवानमें जिसकी समदृष्टि नहीं है, उसमें मुक्तका क्या लक्षण है? ।।
tad-ayuktasya te mokṣe yo 'bhimāno bhaven nṛpa | suhṛd-dhiḥ saṃnivāryas te viraktasyeva bheṣajam ||
Bhishma said: O king, if you are not truly disciplined in yoga, yet you develop the conceit that you have attained liberation, that very notion should be restrained by your well-wishers—just as medicine is withheld from a patient who refuses the prescribed regimen. For without equanimity toward what is pleasant and unpleasant, toward the weak and the strong, what mark of freedom could there be?
भीष्य उवाच
Liberation is not a claim but a lived state marked by equanimity; prideful identification with 'I am liberated' in the absence of yogic discipline is a delusion that should be corrected by wise friends.
In the Shanti Parva’s instruction on dharma and inner freedom, Bhishma admonishes the king that mere self-assertion of jīvanmukti without the actual qualities of yoga—especially even-mindedness toward opposites—must be restrained, illustrated by the analogy of withholding medicine from an undisciplined patient.