Adhyaya 62 — The Fire-God Enters the Brahmin Youth; Varuthini’s Love-Sickness and Kali’s Disguise
न विहारे न चाहारे रमणीयॆ न वा वने ।
न कन्दरॆषु रम्यॆषु सा बबन्ध तदा रतिम् ॥
na vihāre na cāhāre ramaṇīye na vā vane | na kandareṣu ramyeṣu sā babandha tadā ratim ||
Entonces ya no halló deleite—ni en el esparcimiento, ni en la comida, ni en un bosque agradable, ni en cuevas encantadoras; su placer no podía fijarse en parte alguna.
{ "primaryRasa": "karuna", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Obsessive attachment eclipses ordinary joys—food, leisure, and nature lose their charm—showing how rāga can monopolize the mind and generate suffering by narrowing the field of experience.
Narrative ethics/psychology; not pañcalakṣaṇa.
When consciousness is ‘bound’ to a single object, pratyāhāra occurs in a distorted form: the senses withdraw not into inner freedom but into fixation—an inversion of yogic withdrawal.