Aśoka-śāstra: Nārada’s Instruction on the Cessation of Śoka
Grief
ससांख्यधारणं चैव विदितात्मा नरर्षभ | जयेच्च मृत्युं योगेन तत्परेणान्तरात्मना
sa-sāṅkhya-dhāraṇaṃ caiva viditātmā nararṣabha | jayec ca mṛtyuṃ yogena tatpareṇāntarātmanā ||
Dijo Yājñavalkya: «Oh toro entre los hombres, quien ha conocido de verdad el Ser y practica una concentración firme conforme al Sāṅkhya y al Yoga, conquista la muerte por el Yoga: fijando por entero el yo interior en lo Supremo.»
याज्ञवल्क्य उवाच
Self-realization supported by disciplined concentration (dhāraṇā), aligned with Sāṅkhya insight and Yogic practice, enables one to transcend mortality—'conquering death'—by fixing the inner self unwaveringly on the Supreme.
Yājñavalkya instructs an addressed noble listener ('nararṣabha') in a liberation-oriented doctrine: combine Sāṅkhya-based knowledge of the Self with yogic concentration, culminating in meditative absorption where the inner self is placed in the Supreme.