Adhyaya 25 — Madālāsā’s Return, Royal Succession, and the First Teaching to Vikrānta
भूतानि भूतैः परिदुर्बलानि
वृद्धिं समायान्ति यथेह पुंसः ।
अन्नाम्बुपानादिभिरेव कस्य
न तेऽस्ति वृद्धिर्न च तेऽस्ति हानिः ॥
bhūtāni bhūtaiḥ paridurbalāni vṛddhiṃ samāyānti yatheha puṃsaḥ | annāmbupānādibhir eva kasya na te 'sti vṛddhir na ca te 'sti hāniḥ ||
பூதங்கள், பூதங்களாலேயே (பரஸ்பரச் செயலால்) சோர்ந்து, உணவு, நீர், பானம் முதலியவற்றால்—இங்கே மனிதனில் போல—வளர்ச்சியடைகின்றன. ஆனால் உனக்கோ இது யாருடையது? உனக்கு வளர்ச்சியும் இல்லை, குறைதலும் இல்லை.
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Physical growth and decline belong to the body’s constituents; taking oneself as the changeless self (rather than the changing body) is presented as the cure for fear and grief.
A tattva/mokṣa teaching passage embedded within dynastic narrative (vaṃśānucarita), rather than one of the five cosmological markers itself.
The verse points to nirvikāratva (unchangeability) of the true self: nourishment modifies only the pañcabhūta-structure, while awareness itself is not augmented or diminished.