Adhyaya 40 — The Yogin’s Impediments (Upasargas), Subtle Concentrations, and the Eight Siddhis
यथा जलं जलेनैक्यं निक्षिप्तमुपगच्छति ।
तथात्मा साम्यमभ्येति योगिनः परमात्मनि ॥
yathā jalaṃ jalenaikyaṃ nikṣiptam upagacchati / tathātmā sāmyam abhyeti yoginaḥ paramātmani
ดุจน้ำที่เทลงสู่น้ำย่อมเป็นอันหนึ่งอันเดียวกัน ฉันนั้น อาตมันของโยคีย่อมเข้าถึงความเสมอและความเป็นหนึ่งเดียวกับปรมาตมัน (อาตมันสูงสุด)
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The final aim of yoga is identity/sameness with the Supreme Self, not merely altered states. Ethically, it implies equanimity: when one sees sameness with the Whole, partiality and hostility subside.
Philosophical mokṣa-teaching; not a pancalakṣaṇa unit.
Water merging into water conveys non-dual continuity without boundary: individuality is like a temporary delimitation; realization is the dissolution of conceptual borders into undivided awareness.