Adhyāya 180: Jīva, Śarīra, and the Fire Analogy (भृगु–भरद्वाज संवादः)
भीष्म उवाच अजगरचरितं व्रतं महात्मा य इह नरो<नुचरेद् विनीतराग: । अपगतभयलो भमोहमन्यु: स खलु सुखी विचरेदिमं विहारम्
bhīṣma uvāca | ajagaracaritaṁ vrataṁ mahātmā ya iha naro 'nucared vinītarāgaḥ | apagatabhayalobhamohamanyuḥ sa khalu sukhī vicared imaṁ vihāram ||
Wika ni Bhīṣma: O Hari, ang marangal na tao na sa daigdig na ito’y sumusunod sa panatang hinubog sa pamumuhay ng sawa—na napigil ang pagkapit at naiwaksi ang takot, kasakiman, pagkalito, at galit—siya nga’y tunay na namumuhay nang masaya, dumaraan sa buhay sa payapang kalayaan.
भीष्म उवाच
Happiness and freedom in life arise from disciplined restraint: practicing the ‘ajagara-vrata’ (a life of simplicity and non-grasping) and abandoning attachment along with fear, greed, delusion, and anger.
In the Shanti Parva’s instruction to the king, Bhishma recommends an ascetic-ethical model called the ‘ajagara’ (python) observance, praising the person who lives without craving and without the inner enemies of fear, greed, delusion, and anger.