Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) techniques for "exposure and response prevention" literally involve training the mind not to repeatedly check or think about a possession—a precise parallel to Jain pratyakhyana (renunciation of mental involvement).
To the untrained eye, it was just a collection of instructions for gathering and placing wood into a fire. But to Madhava, whose lineage had maintained the household fire for seven generations, it was a map of the cosmos. The Weight of the Wood anvadhana sangraha
It is this fourth stage that Acharya Kundakunda, in his Niyamasara , calls the "most dangerous fire." Physical accumulation may be limited by space or law, but mental accumulation has no bounds. You can lie motionless in a cave and still commit Anvadhana Sangraha regarding a mansion you left behind a thousand miles away. Passage A: “He performs Anvādhāna before sunrise