yogair hemeva durvarṇaá¹
bhÄvayiá¹£yanti sÄdhavaḥ
nirvairÄdibhir ÄtmÄnaá¹
yac-chīlam anuvartitum
yogaiḥ - by the rectifying processes; hema - gold; iva - like; durvarṇam - inferior quality; bhÄvayiá¹£yanti - will purify; sÄdhavaḥ - saintly persons; nirvaira-Ädibhiḥ - by practice of freedom from animosity, etc.; ÄtmÄnam - the self; yat - whose; śīlam - character; anuvartitum - to follow in the footsteps.
Yoga practice, the process of purifying one’s existential identity, is based mainly on self-control. Without self-control one cannot practice freedom from animosity. In the conditional state, every living being is envious of another living being, but in the liberated state there is an absence of animosity. PrahlÄda MahÄrÄja was tortured by his father in so many ways, yet after the death of his father he prayed for his father’s liberation by the Supreme Personality of Godhead. He did not ask any benediction that he might have asked, but he prayed that his atheistic father might be liberated. He never cursed any of the persons who engaged in torturing him at the instigation of his father.