Shloka 10

गुरु शिष्यो नित्यमभिवादयीत स्वाध्यायमिच्छेच्छुचिरप्रमत्त: । मान॑ न कुर्यान्नादधीत रोष- मेष प्रथमो ब्रह्मचर्यस्थ पाद:,ब्रह्मचारी शिष्यको चाहिये कि वह नित्य गुरुको प्रणाम करे, बाहर-भीतरसे पवित्र हो प्रमाद छोड़कर स्वाध्यायमें मन लगावे, अभिमान न करे, मनमें क्रोधको स्थान न दे। यह ब्रह्मबचर्यका पहला चरण है

guruḥ śiṣyo nityam abhivādayīta svādhyāyam icchec chucir apramattaḥ | mānaṁ na kuryān nādadhīta roṣam eṣa prathamo brahmacaryastha pādaḥ ||

Sanatsujāta teaches that a student living the discipline of brahmacarya should daily salute and attend upon the teacher, remain pure in conduct and mind, and—free from negligence—apply himself to sacred study. He should not cultivate pride, nor allow anger to take root within. This, he says, is the first step of brahmacarya: humility, vigilance, and self-controlled learning as the foundation of ethical life.

{'guruḥ''teacher, spiritual preceptor', 'śiṣyaḥ': 'student, disciple', 'nityam': 'always, daily', 'abhivādayīta': 'should salute, should respectfully greet', 'svādhyāya': 'self-study
{'guruḥ':
recitation/study of sacred texts (especially Veda)', 'icchet''should desire, should seek', 'śuciḥ': 'pure, clean (externally and internally)', 'apramattaḥ': 'not negligent
recitation/study of sacred texts (especially Veda)', 'icchet':
vigilant, attentive', 'māna''pride, self-conceit, arrogance', 'na kuryāt': 'should not do/commit', 'na ādadhīta': 'should not place/harbor (within oneself)', 'roṣa': 'anger, wrath', 'eṣa': 'this', 'prathamaḥ': 'first', 'brahmacarya': 'student-discipline
vigilant, attentive', 'māna':
celibate/regulated life devoted to learning and self-control', 'pādaḥ''step, quarter, stage'}
celibate/regulated life devoted to learning and self-control', 'pādaḥ':

सनत्सुजात उवाच

S
Sanatsujāta
G
guru (teacher)
Ś
śiṣya (student)

Educational Q&A

The first step of brahmacarya is disciplined student conduct: daily respectful salutation to the guru, purity, vigilant dedication to svādhyāya, and inner restraint—especially avoiding pride and anger.

In the Udyoga Parva dialogue, Sanatsujāta instructs on dharma and inner mastery; here he outlines foundational rules for a brahmacārin (student) as part of a broader ethical teaching given amid the pre-war counsel.