Adhyaya 37 — Alarka’s Crisis and the Teaching on Non-Attachment (Madālasa’s Instruction Recalled)
तन्मात्रावस्थिते सूक्ष्मे तृतीयांशे च पश्यतः ।
तथैव भूतसद्भावं शरीरं किं सुखासुखम् ॥
tan-mātrāvasthite sūkṣme tṛtīyāṃśe ca paśyataḥ | tathaiva bhūta-sadbhāvaṃ śarīraṃ kiṃ sukhāsukham ||
Lorsque l’on demeure dans l’état subtil et pur du « cela-seul » et que l’on contemple la « troisième part » (un point de vue plus élevé au-delà du grossier et du subtil), le corps est vu comme une simple existence élémentaire ; dès lors, quel plaisir ou quelle douleur pourrait-il y avoir pour le Soi ?
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Seeing the body as elemental process rather than ‘I’ reduces fear and craving. Ethically it encourages restraint and compassion (less ego-driven conflict).
Outside pañcalakṣaṇa; it is contemplative instruction embedded in the Purāṇa.
The ‘third portion’ suggests a transcendental witnessing mode (beyond gross/subtle identifications). In that mode, sukha-duḥkha are recognized as phenomena, not the knower.