Adhyaya 41 — Yogic Conduct and the Discipline Leading to Siddhi
त्यक्तसङ्गो जितक्रोधो लघ्वाहारो जितेन्द्रियः ।
पिधाय बुद्ध्या द्वाराणि मनो ध्याने निवेशयेत् ॥
tyaktasaṅgo jitakrodho laghvāhāro jitendriyaḥ | pidhāya buddhyā dvārāṇi mano dhyāne niveśayet ||
Tendo abandonado o apego, conquistado a ira, alimentando-se com leveza e dominado os sentidos—fechando as “portas” com o intelecto, deve-se colocar a mente em meditação (dhyāna).
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "bhakti", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Meditation is not merely a technique; it rests on moral-emotional purification (angerlessness), lifestyle moderation (light diet), and detachment, culminating in deliberate sensory withdrawal guided by buddhi.
Ācāra-yoga instruction; supportive teaching within the Purāṇa’s broader compendium, not a sarga/manvantara/genealogy passage.
‘Closing the doors with buddhi’ points to pratyāhāra: the discriminative faculty disengages attention from sense-objects so the mind can abide in its source and become fit for samādhi.