The Fall of Purañjana and the Supersoul as the Eternal Friend
Purañjana-Upākhyāna Culmination
शीतोष्णवातवर्षाणि क्षुत्पिपासे प्रियाप्रिये । सुखदु:खे इति द्वन्द्वान्यजयत्समदर्शन: ॥ ३७ ॥
śītoṣṇa-vāta-varṣāṇi kṣut-pipāse priyāpriye sukha-duḥkhe iti dvandvāny ajayat sama-darśanaḥ
Силой аскезы царь Малаядхваджа стал равнодушно-равным к двойственностям: холоду и жаре, ветру и дождю, голоду и жажде, приятному и неприятному, счастью и страданию. Так он победил все относительные противоположности.
Liberation means becoming free from the relativities of the world. Unless one is self-realized, he has to undergo the dual struggle of the relative world. In Bhagavad-gītā Lord Kṛṣṇa advises Arjuna to conquer all relativities through tolerance. Lord Kṛṣṇa points out that it is the relativities like winter and summer that give us trouble in the material world. In the winter we do not like taking a bath, but in the summer we wish to take a bath twice, thrice or more a day. Thus Kṛṣṇa advises us not to be disturbed by such relativities and dualities when they come and go.
This verse teaches that a spiritually mature person becomes sama-darśana—equipoised—and thereby conquers the inevitable dualities such as happiness and distress, pleasant and unpleasant experiences.
In the Purañjana allegory, Śukadeva highlights the symptoms of inner steadiness: by equal vision and detachment, one is no longer defeated by bodily and material opposites like weather, appetite, and emotional likes and dislikes.
Practice tolerance and steadiness: don’t let comfort/discomfort, praise/blame, or success/failure dictate your mind; stay fixed in dharma and remembrance of the Lord while doing your duties.