योगस्वरूप-धारणा-समाधि-वर्णनम् (केशिध्वजोपदेशः)
आत्मभावं नयेत्तेन तद्ब्रह्माध्यापनं मनः । विकार्यमात्मनः शक्त्या लोहमाकर्षको यथा ॥ ६ ॥
ātmabhāvaṃ nayettena tadbrahmādhyāpanaṃ manaḥ | vikāryamātmanaḥ śaktyā lohamākarṣako yathā || 6 ||
By that discipline, one should lead the mind into the sense of the Self; then the mind becomes absorbed in Brahman. By the power of one’s own inner energy it becomes transformable—just as a magnet draws iron.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It teaches that liberation is supported by training the mind to rest in ātma-bhāva (Self-sense), which naturally culminates in brahma-niṣṭhā—steady absorption in Brahman—through inner spiritual शक्ति (śakti).
While framed in moksha-dharma and jñāna-yoga language, it aligns with bhakti by implying that sustained inward turning and one-pointedness make the mind ‘drawn’ to the Supreme, as iron to a magnet—devotion functioning as the attracting force that fixes the mind in the Divine.
No specific Vedāṅga (like Vyākaraṇa or Jyotiṣa) is directly taught; the practical takeaway is yogic discipline—redirecting the mind through repeated practice (abhyāsa) toward Brahman, a core method used alongside Vedic study.