Adhyaya 39 — Yoga Discipline: Posture, Breath Control, Sense Withdrawal, and Signs of Attainment
यथैवाम्रफलं ध्यायेत् तृष्णार्तो रसनेंद्रिये ।
यस्मिन् यस्मिन् रुजा देहे तस्मिंस्तदुपकारिणी ॥
yathaivāmraphalaṃ dhyāyet tṛṣṇārto rasanendriye /
yasmin yasmin rujā dehe tasmiṃs tad-upakāriṇīm //
ଯେପରି ତୃଷାର୍ତ୍ତ ମଣିଷ ରସେନ୍ଦ୍ରିୟଦ୍ୱାରା ଆମ୍ବ ଫଳକୁ ହିଁ ଚିନ୍ତନ କରେ, ସେପରି ଦେହରେ ଯେଉଁଯେଉଁ ସ୍ଥାନରେ ପୀଡା ହୁଏ ସେଉଁଠି ସେଇ ସ୍ଥାନକୁ ହିତକର ବିଶେଷ ଉପାୟକୁ ଧ୍ୟାନରେ ଧାରଣ କରିବା ଉଚିତ।
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "karuna", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Attention (citta) can be deliberately directed: as craving fixes the mind on an object, a yogin can fix the mind on a corrective principle suited to the afflicted bodily locus, cultivating mastery over reactive sensation.
This is not pancalakṣaṇa material (sarga/pratisarga/vaṃśa/manvantara/vaṃśānucarita); it belongs to upaśikṣā—practical yogic instruction embedded in the Purāṇic narrative.
The verse hints at a correspondence principle: specific mental forms (saṅkalpa/dhāraṇā) are matched to specific bodily disturbances, implying a subtle-body mapping where cognition can modulate prāṇic flow.