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Shloka 40

Adhyāya 240: Indriya–Manas–Buddhi–Ātman — The Inner Hierarchy and Restraint (इन्द्रिय-मनस्-बुद्धि-आत्म-क्रमः)

सत्त्वसंसेवनाद धीरो निद्रामुच्छेत्तुमरहति । विद्वानोंने योगके जो काम

sattvasaṃsevanād dhīro nidrām ucchettum arhati | vidvān yoge ye kāma-krodha-lobha-bhaya-svapna iti pañca doṣāḥ proktās teṣāṃ pūrṇatayā ucchedaṃ kuryāt | teṣāṃ madhye krodhaṃ śamena (manonigrahena) jayet, kāmaṃ saṅkalpatyāgena parājayet, tathā dhīraḥ sattvaguṇasaṃsevanena nidrāyā ucchedaṃ kartum arhati ||

व्यासः शिक्षयामास—सत्त्वसंसेवनाद् धीरः निद्राम् अत्यन्ताम् उच्छेत्तुं शक्नोति। योगे प्रोक्तान् पञ्च दोषान्—कामं क्रोधं लोभं भयं पञ्चमं स्वप्नमोहं च—विद्वान् समूलान् उच्छिन्यात्। तेषु क्रोधः शमेन मनोनिग्रहेण जेतव्यः; कामः संकल्पदुराग्रहत्यागेन पराजेयः। एवं सत्त्वनिष्ठया धीरः निद्रालस्यं जयति।

{'sattva-saṃsevana''cultivation/association with sattva
{'sattva-saṃsevana':
practice of clarity, purity, balance', 'dhīra''steadfast, self-possessed, resolute person', 'nidrā': 'sleep
practice of clarity, purity, balance', 'dhīra':
also lethargy/torpor in an ethical-ascetic context', 'ucchettum / uccheda''to cut off, uproot, eradicate', 'vidvān': 'the wise, learned person', 'yoga': 'discipline of inner restraint and integration
also lethargy/torpor in an ethical-ascetic context', 'ucchettum / uccheda':
practical spiritual method', 'kāma''desire, craving, sensual/egoic impulse', 'krodha': 'anger, wrath', 'lobha': 'greed, grasping', 'bhaya': 'fear', 'svapna': 'dream
practical spiritual method', 'kāma':
here as a fault implying delusive mental projection', 'doṣa''fault, defect, moral-psychological blemish', 'śama': 'calmness
here as a fault implying delusive mental projection', 'doṣa':
pacification of the inner organ (mind)', 'manonigraha''control/restraint of the mind', 'saṅkalpa-tyāga': 'abandonment of (self-serving) intentions, resolve-born cravings, mental constructions', 'jayet': 'should conquer', 'parājayet': 'should defeat, overcome'}
pacification of the inner organ (mind)', 'manonigraha':

व्यास उवाच

V
Vyāsa

Educational Q&A

The verse teaches a practical ethic of inner conquest: uproot five yogic defects—desire, anger, greed, fear, and dream-delusion—by specific counter-practices. Anger is subdued through śama (mental restraint), desire through abandoning saṅkalpa (compulsive intention/craving), and lethargy/sleep through sustained cultivation of sattva.

In the Śānti Parva’s instruction-oriented setting, Vyāsa speaks as a teacher, laying out a concise yogic regimen: identify key inner enemies and apply targeted disciplines to purify conduct and stabilize the mind.