दारुवनलीला—नीललोहितपरीक्षा, ब्रह्मोपदेशः, अतिथिधर्मः, संन्यासक्रमः
पर्णवृत्त्या पयोवृत्त्या फलवृत्त्यापि वा यतिः एवं जीवन्मृतो नो चेत् षण्मासाद्वत्सरात्तु वा
parṇavṛttyā payovṛttyā phalavṛttyāpi vā yatiḥ evaṃ jīvanmṛto no cet ṣaṇmāsādvatsarāttu vā
Un yati (renunciante) puede sostenerse viviendo de hojas, o de leche, o incluso de frutos. Si con tal continencia no llega a ser “muerto en vida”, es decir, interiormente desligado del pāśa (atadura) aun estando encarnado, entonces en seis meses, o a lo sumo en un año, debe consumar ese estado mediante un desapego más intenso y una disciplina orientada a Śiva.
Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages at Naimisharanya)
It frames purity and restraint as prerequisites for Shiva-upasana: simple sustenance and disciplined living reduce pasha (bondage), making the pashu fit for steady Linga-centered meditation and worship.
By implying that liberation is the ‘death’ of craving while alive, it points to Shiva as Pati—the transcendent Lord beyond attachment—toward whom the yati aligns his consciousness to dissolve pasha.
Ascetic niyama (regulated diet and austerity) supporting Pashupata-style vairagya—training the mind to become jīvanmṛta (inwardly detached) as a step toward jivanmukti.