Mokṣa-dharma Yoga-Upadeśa: Equanimity, Sense-Restraint, and Vision of the Ātman (आत्मदर्शन-योगोपदेशः)
अन्यान्याश्षैव तनवो यशथेष्टं प्रतिपद्यते । विनिवृत्य जरां मृत्युंन शोचति न हृष्पति
anyānyāś caiva tanavo yathā-iṣṭaṁ pratipadyate | vinivṛtya jarāṁ mṛtyuṁ na śocati na hṛṣyati ||
ब्राह्मण म्हणाला—असा योगी आपल्या इच्छेनुसार विविध देह धारण करू शकतो. तो जरा व मृत्यूलाही परतावतो; तो न शोक करतो, न हर्षित होतो.
ब्राह्मण उवाच
The core teaching is equanimity born of yogic realization: even extraordinary attainments (such as assuming forms at will) are secondary to the inner freedom that neither collapses into grief nor rises into elation.
A Brāhmaṇa speaker describes the capacities and inner state of a perfected yogin—able to take on bodies at will and to overcome the fear of aging and death—while emphasizing the hallmark of such perfection: freedom from emotional extremes.