Śuka’s Manifestation from the Araṇi (Āraṇeya-janma) — शुकजन्म (आरणेय-सम्भव)
रात्रिरेतावती चैव मनसश्ष नराधिप । ऐसे विषयासक्त प्राणी तिर्यग्योनियोंमें प्रवेश करके इसी संसारमें चक्कर काटते रहते हैं। इन शब्दादि विषयोंका एक दिन तीन हजार कल्पोंका बताया जाता है। नरेश्वर! इनकी रात भी इतनी ही बड़ी है। मनके भी दिन-रातका परिमाण इतना ही है
rātrir etāvatī caiva manasaś ca narādhipa | evaṃ viṣayāsaktaḥ prāṇī tiryagyonīṣu praviśya asmin saṃsāre paribhramati | śabdādi-viṣayāṇāṃ divasaḥ trīṇi-sahasra-kalpātmakaḥ proktaḥ | nareśvara etāvatī eva teṣāṃ rātriḥ | manaso 'pi divā-rātra-parimāṇam etāvat eva ||
Wika ni Yājñavalkya: “O Hari, ang gabi para sa isip ay may gayon ding sukat. Kaya ang nilalang na nakakapit sa mga bagay ng pandama ay pumapasok sa mga sinapupunan ng hayop at patuloy na umiikot sa mundong ito. Para sa mga saklaw ng tunog at iba pang bagay ng pandama, ang isang ‘araw’ ay ipinahahayag na umaabot sa tatlong libong kalpa; O panginoon ng mga tao, ang kanilang ‘gabi’ ay gayon ding kalawak. Ang araw at gabi ng isip ay dapat ding maunawaang may kaparehong sukat.”
याज़्ञवल्क्य उवाच
Attachment to sense-objects binds the mind and drives continued wandering in saṃsāra, even into animal births; therefore one should cultivate detachment and mastery of the mind, recognizing the vast, cosmic scale of bondage symbolized by immense ‘days and nights’ of sense-experience.
In a didactic discourse within Śānti Parva, the sage Yājñavalkya addresses a king and explains a cosmological-ethical point: the realms of sensory enjoyment have enormous cycles of ‘day and night’ (measured in thousands of kalpas), and beings attached to these objects keep revolving through rebirth within the world.