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Shloka 27

अध्याय ३३१: नारायणकथा-प्रशंसा तथा नारदस्य श्वेतद्वीप-निवृत्ति एवं बदरी-आगमनम् | Chapter 331: Praise of the Nārāyaṇa Narrative; Nārada’s Return from Śvetadvīpa and Arrival at Badarī

प्राक्सम्प्रयोगाद्‌ भूतानां नास्ति दुःखं परायणम्‌ । विप्रयोगात्‌ तु सर्वस्य न शोचेत्‌ प्रकृतिस्थित:

prāk-samprayogād bhūtānāṁ nāsti duḥkhaṁ parāyaṇam | viprayogāt tu sarvasya na śocet prakṛti-sthitaḥ ||

Dijo Nārada: «Antes de que los seres lleguen a asociarse entre sí, no hay dolor que pueda aferrarse como último refugio. Sólo después de la unión—cuando sobreviene la separación—nace el pesar para todos. Por eso, el hombre discerniente que permanece en su verdadera naturaleza no debe lamentarse por separarse de nadie.»

{'prāk''formerly, before', 'samprayoga': 'coming together, association, union', 'bhūtānām': 'of beings, of living creatures', 'na asti': 'there is not', 'duḥkham': 'sorrow, suffering, grief', 'parāyaṇam': 'ultimate refuge
{'prāk':
that which one falls back upon as final resort', 'viprayogāt''from separation, due to disunion', 'tu': 'but, indeed', 'sarvasya': 'for everyone, of all', 'na śocet': 'should not grieve', 'prakṛti-sthitaḥ': 'one established in one’s own nature
that which one falls back upon as final resort', 'viprayogāt':

नारद उवाच

N
Nārada

Educational Q&A

Sorrow is not intrinsic to the self; it arises from attachment formed after association and is triggered by separation. One who is established in one’s true nature (prakṛti-sthita) maintains equanimity and does not grieve over inevitable partings.

In Śānti Parva’s instruction-oriented setting, Nārada delivers a reflective teaching: he analyzes the cause of grief (viprayoga after samprayoga) and prescribes steadiness in one’s own nature as the ethical and spiritual response.