अशोच्ये शोचसि शुभे शोच्ये नैवाऽपि शोचसि । देहस्यास्य कृते मिथ्यासंसारे किं विमुह्यसि
aśocye śocasi śubhe śocye naivā'pi śocasi | dehasyāsya kṛte mithyāsaṃsāre kiṃ vimuhyasi
O auspicious one, you grieve for what is not truly to be grieved for, and you do not grieve for what is truly worthy of grief. For the sake of this body, why are you bewildered in this false, delusive round of worldly existence?
Sūta (Lomaharṣaṇa) addressing the sages (deduced from Māheśvarakhaṇḍa convention)
Tirtha: महीसागरसंगम (contextual)
Type: sangam
Listener: Mother (within scene)
Scene: The son gestures gently as if separating ‘real’ and ‘unreal’; the mother’s face shows dawning realization; behind them, waves repeatedly arise and dissolve—visual metaphor for saṃsāra.
It redirects grief away from the perishable body toward true spiritual discernment, urging freedom from delusion in saṃsāra.
No specific tīrtha is named in this verse; it functions as a general dharma-teaching within the Kaumārikākhaṇḍa narrative.
None in this verse; it is purely an instruction in right understanding and detachment.