Adhyaya 10 — Jaimini’s Questions on Birth, Death, Karma, and the Embodied Journey
पुत्र उवाच शृणु तात ! यथा वृत्तं ममेदं सुख-दुःखदम् ।
यश्चाहमासमन्यस्मिन् जन्मन्यस्मत्परन्तु यत् ॥
putra uvāca śṛṇu tāta yathā vṛttaṃ mamedaṃ sukha-duḥkha-dam | yaś cāham āsam anyasmin janmany asmat parantu yat ||
သားက ပြောသည်—အဖေရေ၊ ငါ့အပေါ်၌ ဤအရာ ဘယ်လို ဖြစ်ပွားခဲ့သည်ကို နားထောင်ပါ—ပျော်ရွှင်မှုနှင့် နာကျင်မှု နှစ်မျိုးလုံးကို ယူဆောင်လာခဲ့သည်—ထို့ပြင် ဤဘဝနှင့် မတူသော အခြားမွေးဖွားခြင်းတွင် ငါ ဘာဖြစ်ခဲ့သည်ကိုလည်း။
{ "primaryRasa": "karuna", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Life’s mixed outcomes (sukha/duḥkha) are traced to karmic continuity across births; recounting prior states is used to teach responsibility and the possibility of spiritual recovery.
Not a genealogical vaṃśa list, but a karmic-biographical narrative serving dharma and mokṣa instruction; it uses the Purāṇic storytelling method to convey doctrine.
The ‘other birth’ points to layered identity: the jīva’s journey through forms, while the witnessing awareness can reawaken remembrance and detachment.