Anadhyaya and the Winds: From Vedic Recitation Protocol to Sanatkumara’s Moksha-Upadesha
इन्द्रियैर्नियतैर्देही धाराभिरिव तर्प्यते । लोके विहितमात्मानं लोकं चात्मनि पश्यति ॥ ८५ ॥
indriyairniyatairdehī dhārābhiriva tarpyate | loke vihitamātmānaṃ lokaṃ cātmani paśyati || 85 ||
Ketika indria dikendalikan, sang berjiwa-berbadan menjadi puas, seakan disegarkan oleh aliran yang mantap. Ia lalu melihat Diri yang ditegakkan di dunia, dan dunia yang terpantul di dalam Diri.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It teaches that true contentment arises from indriya-nigraha (restraint of the senses), which matures into a higher vision where one recognizes the Self pervading worldly life and also beholds the world as contained within the Self—an experiential mark of moksha-oriented wisdom.
Although framed as moksha-dharma, the verse supports bhakti by emphasizing purification through sense-discipline; when the senses are governed, the mind becomes steady and capable of sustained remembrance and inward vision—conditions that make Vishnu-bhakti (single-pointed devotion) stable and transformative.
No specific Vedanga (like Vyakarana, Shiksha, or Jyotisha) is directly taught; the practical takeaway is yogic discipline—sense-restraint and inner observation—as a foundational sadhana for scriptural insight and liberation.