Mahabharata - Shanti Parva (महाभारत - शान्तिपर्वम्)
12.243
Vyāsa said.
A Brāhmaṇa who truly understands should not pursue scents, tastes, or pleasures, nor seek ornaments. He should not desire respect, fame, or glory; such is the conduct of a wise Brāhmaṇa.
A true Brāhmaṇa is one who, being desirous to serve and observing celibacy, studies all the Vedas—Rig, Yajur, and Sāma. Without this, he is not a Brāhmaṇa.
He who is like a relative to all beings, who knows everything and all the Vedas, who is without desire, never dies; neither by him nor the Brāhmaṇa (is death caused or experienced).
Even after performing various oblations and sacrifices with proper gifts, one does not attain Brahminhood by mere contemplation in any way.
When a person neither fears nor is feared by others, when he neither desires nor hates, then he attains Brahman.
When a person does not harbor or perform any evil towards all beings—whether by action, mind, or speech—then that person attains Brahman.
Only the bondage of desire exists; there is no other bondage here. One who is freed from the bondage of desire is indeed fit to become Brahman. "12-243-7".
But when freed from desire, just as the moon emerges from a smoky cloud, the steadfast person, purified and passionless, patiently awaits the right time and remains firm with courage.
Just as waters enter the ocean, which is being filled and has a firm foundation, so too, he who is dear to desire, not one who desires desires, he indeed, the embodied being, attains heaven from this world.
The essence of the Veda is truth; the essence of truth is self-restraint; the essence of self-restraint is charity; the essence of charity is austerity.
Renunciation is the true essence of austerity; happiness is the essence of renunciation; heaven is the essence of happiness; and tranquility is the essence of heaven.
If you seek steadiness, know that the supreme state marked by peace comes from contentment, not from the moistening, sorrow, or burning of the mind with thirst.
He who is free from sorrow, without possessiveness, peaceful, clear-minded, the best knower of the self, endowed with these six characteristics, will once again become whole.
Those who are endowed with the six qualities of sattva, who are wise and have superior counsellors, know both the self after departing and those who are situated here, in the same way.
A person of virtuous wisdom attains imperishable happiness, which is genuine, indestructible, natural, and unmodified, and is of the nature of the self.
When one makes the mind unmoving and establishes it everywhere, the contentment that is attained thereby cannot be obtained in any other way.
He who knows that by which one is satisfied without eating, by which a person without wealth is pleased, and by which one without affection possesses strength—he is truly the knower of knowledge.
He who, having truly closed the doors of his senses and reflecting within, remains self-controlled, that Brāhmaṇa is called one who delights in the self.
One who is established in the supreme reality, whose desires have been exhausted, abides in that state; happiness follows him from all sides, and his body becomes like that of the moon.
The sage who does not partake in entities and qualities with distinctions, his suffering is removed by happiness, just as darkness is removed by the sun.
Old age and death do not affect that brāhmaṇa who has transcended actions and the decline of qualities, even if he is attached to sense-objects.
When he is liberated from all sides and remains equal, he transcends the senses and sense-objects even while remaining in the body.
Once the supreme cause is attained and the state of effect has been transcended, there is no return for what has reached beyond the highest.

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ॐ असतो मा सद्गमय। तमसो मा ज्योतिर्गमय। मृत्योर्माऽमृतं गमय। ॐ शान्ति: शान्ति: शान्ति: ॥ - बृहदारण्यकोपनिषद् 1.3.28
"Ōm! Lead me from the unreal to the real, from darkness to light, and from death to immortality. Let there be peace, peace, and peace. Ōm!" - Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 1.3.28

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