त्वङ्मात्रसारनिःसारं कदलीसारसंनिभम् । ज्ञात्वैवं दोषवद्देहं यः प्राज्ञः शिथिलीभवेत्
tvaṅmātrasāraniḥsāraṃ kadalīsārasaṃnibham | jñātvaivaṃ doṣavaddehaṃ yaḥ prājñaḥ śithilībhavet
إذا عَلِمَ المرءُ أن الجسدَ أجوفُ، وأن «جوهره» ليس إلا الجلد، شبيهٌ بلبِّ ساق الموز، فإن الحكيم إذ يرى هذا البدنَ المملوءَ بالعيوب يرخِي قبضته ويزول تعلّقه.
Lomaharṣaṇa (Sūta) to the sages (deduced from Māheśvarakhaṇḍa context)
Scene: A contemplative ascetic or wise devotee sits in stillness, holding a banana stem split open to show its hollow pith, while the body is subtly depicted as fragile and transient; the mood is quiet renunciation.
Contemplating the body’s fragility and fault-filled nature helps the wise relax their clinging and cultivate dispassion.
No site is mentioned; the verse is a vairāgya-oriented reflection rather than a tīrtha-māhātmya.
No ritual act is prescribed; the practice implied is reflective discernment (viveka) leading to detachment.