Adhyaya 42 — Dattatreya on the Yogic Import of Oṃ (Praṇava): Matras, Worlds, and Liberation
यस्तु वेद नरः सम्यक् तथा ध्यायति वा पुनः ।
संसारचक्रमुत्सृज्य त्यक्तत्रिविधबन्धनः ॥
yastu veda naraḥ samyak tathā dhyāyati vā punaḥ /
saṃsāracakram utsṛjya tyakta-trividha-bandhanaḥ //
ผู้ใดเข้าใจคำสอนนี้โดยแท้จริง หรือเจริญภาวนาใคร่ครวญซ้ำแล้วซ้ำเล่าอย่างถูกต้อง ผู้นั้นย่อมสละพันธนาการสามประการ ตัดวงจรสังสารวัฏ และบรรลุความหลุดพ้น (โมกษะ)
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "bhakti", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Right knowledge and sustained meditation are presented as direct means to end saṃsāra. Ethically, the verse prioritizes inner discipline (dhyāna) over mere external identity, asserting liberation through correct understanding and practice.
It does not primarily serve Sarga/Pratisarga/Manvantara/Vaṃśa/Vaṃśānucarita; it belongs to the Purāṇic upadeśa (instructional) layer—yoga and liberation teaching—often embedded alongside the five marks.
‘Threefold bondage’ can be read inwardly as the tri-guṇa fetters (sattva-rajas-tamas) or as triple knots binding consciousness (ignorance, karmic momentum, and attachment). The ‘wheel’ imagery signals repetitive identification with changing states, broken by stable contemplation.