Rahūgaṇa Meets Jaḍa Bharata: The Shaking Palanquin and the Teaching Beyond Body-Identity
विशेषबुद्धेर्विवरं मनाक् च पश्याम यन्न व्यवहारतोऽन्यत् । क ईश्वरस्तत्र किमीशितव्यं तथापि राजन् करवाम किं ते ॥ १२ ॥
viśeṣa-buddher vivaraṁ manāk ca paśyāma yan na vyavahārato ’nyat ka īśvaras tatra kim īśitavyaṁ tathāpi rājan karavāma kiṁ te
Ô roi, si tu penses encore que tu es le roi et que je suis ton serviteur, alors donne-moi un ordre, et je l’exécuterai. Cette distinction ne s’étend que par l’usage et la convention; je n’en vois pas d’autre cause. Dès lors, qui est maître et qui est serviteur? Tous sont contraints par les lois de la nature matérielle; ainsi nul n’est maître, nul n’est serviteur en vérité. Pourtant, si tu me tiens pour ton serviteur, je l’accepte: ordonne, que puis-je faire pour toi?
It is said in Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, ahaṁ mameti: One thinks, “I am this body, and in this bodily relationship he is my master, he is my servant, she is my wife, and he is my son.” All these conceptions are temporary due to the inevitable change of body and the arrangement of material nature. We are gathered together like straws floating in the waves of an ocean, straws that are inevitably separated by the laws of the waves. In this material world, everyone is floating on the waves of the ocean of nescience. As described by Bhaktivinoda Ṭhākura:
This verse warns that taking social or bodily-based practicality as ultimate reality reveals a flaw in discrimination; from the standpoint of truth, the ideas of “controller” and “controlled” lose their meaning.
Rahūgaṇa judged Bharata through bodily and social roles (carrier, servant), so Bharata corrected him by pointing out the king’s misidentification with external dealings rather than the self’s reality.
Use duties and roles responsibly, but don’t equate them with your identity; practice stepping back from ego-driven labels (“boss,” “worker,” “status”) and cultivate self-inquiry and devotion to see beyond mere convention.