Strī Parva, Adhyāya 2 — Vidura’s Consolation on Kāla, Karma, and the Limits of Lamentation (विदुरोपदेशः)
मानुषा मानसैर्दु:खैर्दहान्ते चाल्पबुद्धय: । मन्दबुद्धि मनुष्य ही अप्रिय वस्तुका संयोग और प्रिय वस्तुका वियोग होनेपर मानसिक दुःखोंसे दग्ध होने लगते हैं
mānuṣā mānasair duḥkhair dahyante cālpabuddhayaḥ | mandabuddhi-manuṣyā hi apriya-vastuka-saṃyoge priya-vastuka-viyoge ca mānasair duḥkhair dagdhā bhavanti |
অল্পবুদ্ধি মানুষ মানসিক দুঃখে দগ্ধ হয়; অপ্রিয়ের সংযোগ বা প্রিয়ের বিয়োগ ঘটলে তারা অন্তরে অন্তরে জ্বলে ওঠে।
विदुर उवाच
Mental anguish intensifies in those lacking discernment: attachment to the pleasant and aversion to the unpleasant make the mind burn when faced with unwanted contact or the loss of what is loved.
In the Stree Parva’s lament-filled aftermath of the war, Vidura offers reflective counsel, diagnosing how ordinary people become inwardly tormented by the mind’s reactions to separation and unwanted encounters.