Yoga-siddhi — The Mystic Perfections and Their Origin in Meditation on the Lord
नारायणे तुरीयाख्ये भगवच्छब्दशब्दिते । मनो मय्यादधद् योगी मद्धर्मा वशितामियात् ॥ १६ ॥
nārāyaṇe turīyākhye bhagavac-chabda-śabdite mano mayy ādadhad yogī mad-dharmā vaśitām iyāt
El yogui que fija su mente en Mi forma de Nārāyaṇa, llamada el cuarto estado y colmada de todas las opulencias, adquiere Mi naturaleza y obtiene la perfección mística llamada vaśitā.
In Bhagavad-gītā (7.13) Lord Kṛṣṇa states:
This verse teaches that when a yogī fixes the mind on Nārāyaṇa—the transcendent turīya, the Supreme Bhagavān—he attains inner mastery (vaśitā), meaning control and steadiness born of divine absorption.
In the Uddhava Gītā section on yoga perfections, Kṛṣṇa explains that real yogic control arises from absorption in the Supreme Lord, not merely from technique—thus He directs Uddhava toward God-centered meditation.
Daily, place the mind on the Lord through nāma-japa, prayer, and remembrance; as devotion deepens, self-control becomes natural—reducing distraction, impulsiveness, and anxiety.