Adhyaya 36 — Madalasa’s Final Counsel and the Renunciation of King Ritadhvaja
मदालसा च तनयं प्राहेदं पश्चिमं वचः ।
कामोपभोगसंसर्गप्रहाणाय सुतस्य वै ॥
madālasā ca tanayaṃ prāhedaṃ paścimaṃ vacaḥ | kāmopabhogasaṃsargaprahāṇāya sutasya vai
Y Madālasā dijo a su hijo estas palabras finales—destinadas, en verdad, a que el hijo abandonara el apego a los contactos y a los goces del deseo.
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True welfare is framed as freedom from compulsive pleasure-seeking; the mother’s counsel presents renunciation (prahāṇa) as a practical remedy for suffering rooted in desire.
It sits within Vaṃśānucarita as a didactic insert—ethical teaching embedded in dynastic narrative.
‘Saṃsarga’ (contact/entanglement) hints at the subtle chain: sense-contact → craving → bondage; the instruction targets the causal root rather than symptoms.