Adhyaya 10 — Jaimini’s Questions on Birth, Death, Karma, and the Embodied Journey
वनस्थश्च ततो वत्स परिव्राड् निःपरिग्रहः ।
एवमाप्स्यसि तद्ब्रह्म यत्र गत्वा न शोचसि ॥
vanasthaś ca tato vatsa parivrāḍ niṣparigrahaḥ | evam āpsyasi tad brahma yatra gatvā na śocasi ||
แล้วต่อไป โอ้ผู้เป็นที่รัก เมื่ออยู่ในป่า จงเป็นบรรพชิตจาริกผู้ไร้การยึดถือทรัพย์สิน; ด้วยประการนี้ท่านจักบรรลุพรหมันนั้น ซึ่งเมื่อบรรลุแล้ว ย่อมไม่เศร้าโศก
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Renunciation is defined by non-possession and wandering dependence-free life. The promised fruit is freedom from sorrow—classically linked with liberation through knowledge and dispassion.
This is dharma/upadeśa material (ethical-philosophical instruction). It is not a direct pancalakṣaṇa item, though it can be seen as supporting the purāṇic aim of guiding conduct toward mokṣa.
‘Niṣparigraha’ points to dropping identity-supports (possessions, roles). ‘Wandering’ symbolizes non-fixation; the mind ceases to build a ‘home’ in transient phenomena, enabling Brahman-abidance.