Adhyāya 284: Tapas as a Corrective to Household Attachment
Parāśara’s Instruction
जो अंगुष्ठमात्र जीवके रूपमें सम्पूर्ण देहधारियोंके भीतर विराजमान हैं, वे सदा मेरी रक्षा और वृद्धि करें ।।
yo 'ṅguṣṭhamātraḥ jīvake rūpeṇa sampūrṇa-dehadhāriṇāṁ bhitare virājamānaḥ, sa sadā mama rakṣāṁ ca vṛddhiṁ ca karotu || ye na rodanti dehasthā dehino rodayanti ca | harṣayanti na hṛṣyanti namas tebhyo 'stu nityaśaḥ ||
Bhīṣma dit : «Puisse ce principe de vie intérieur—subtil comme un pouce et pourtant présent en tous les êtres incarnés—me protéger sans cesse et accroître mon bien-être. Je m’incline continuellement devant ces Rudra qui, tout en demeurant dans le corps, ne pleurent pas eux-mêmes et font pourtant pleurer les incarnés ; qui ne s’exaltent pas eux-mêmes et font pourtant se réjouir les incarnés—puissances qui mettent en mouvement la vie intérieure tout en demeurant intactes.»
भीष्म उवाच
The verse points to an inner, subtle principle present in all embodied beings and to divine powers (Rudras) that operate within experience—producing sorrow and joy in the embodied—while themselves remaining unaffected. Ethically, it encourages reverence, humility, and a contemplative detachment: emotions arise in embodied life, yet the deeper indwelling reality is not bound by them.
In the Śānti Parva, Bhīṣma instructs Yudhiṣṭhira on dharma and higher truths. Here he offers a prayer-like salutation: he seeks protection and flourishing from the indwelling life-principle and bows to the Rudras conceived as inner forces present within bodies that govern the arising of grief and joy.