Adhyaya 44 — Subahu’s Counsel to the King of Kashi and Alarka’s Renunciation through Yoga
ततो मया विनिश्चित्य दुःखाद्वैराग्यभावना ।
भविष्यतीत्यस्य भवानित्युद्योगाय संश्रितः ॥
tato mayā viniścitya duḥkhād vairāgya-bhāvanā / bhaviṣyatīty asya bhavān ity udyogāya saṃśritaḥ
ထို့ကြောင့် ဒုက္ခမှ သူ့အတွက် ဝိရာဂျ (ကင်းလွတ်ခြင်း) ကို ပြုစုပျိုးထောင်ခြင်း ပေါ်ပေါက်လာမည်ဟု ဆုံးဖြတ်ပြီး၊ ဤလုပ်ငန်းအတွက် မိတ်ဖက်အဖြစ် သင့်ထံ၌ အားကိုးခိုလှုံခဲ့သည်။
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Suffering can become a teacher when guided toward insight; the ethical nuance is that the intention is remedial—aimed at awakening, not harm.
Dharma/nīti instruction through narrative causality; not within the five cosmological/genealogical markers except as embedded storytelling.
Duḥkha is treated as a transformative fire that burns attachment; the verse encodes the inner alchemy where pain is transmuted into vairāgya through right ‘bhāvanā’ (cultivation).