Śokanivāraṇa: Non-brooding, Impermanence, Contentment, and Śuka’s Renunciation
भजंति हि शारीराणि रोगाः शरीरमानसाः । सायका इव तीक्ष्णाग्राः प्रयुक्ता दृढधन्विभिः ॥ १५ ॥
bhajaṃti hi śārīrāṇi rogāḥ śarīramānasāḥ | sāyakā iva tīkṣṇāgrāḥ prayuktā dṛḍhadhanvibhiḥ || 15 ||
ជំងឺនានា ទាំងកាយទាំងចិត្ត ពិតជាវាយប្រហារលើសត្វមានកាយ ដូចព្រួញមុខមុត ដែលអ្នកបាញ់ព្រួញដៃមាំ បាញ់ចេញ។
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
It frames physical and mental ailments as inevitable assaults on embodied life, urging the seeker to cultivate dispassion and pursue moksha-oriented discipline rather than mistaking the body-mind complex for lasting refuge.
By highlighting the vulnerability of body and mind, it implicitly redirects reliance toward the Divine as the steady support beyond changing conditions—strengthening the bhakti attitude of surrender and remembrance amid suffering.
No specific Vedanga is taught directly; the practical takeaway is ethical-psychological: observe how mental states intensify suffering and apply disciplined self-control (dama) and steadiness (dhairya) as part of moksha-dharma practice.