Aśoka-śāstra: Nārada’s Instruction on the Cessation of Śoka
Grief
ऊर्णनाभेर्यथा चक्र छिद्रें सोम॑ं प्रपश्यति
ūrṇanābher yathā cakra-chidre somaṃ prapaśyati
Sinabi ni Yājñavalkya: “Kung paanong ang gagamba, sa pagtanaw sa siwang sa gitna ng kaniyang sapot, ay namamasdan ang buwan, gayon din ang taong may pag-unawa: sa isang maselang ‘butas-daan’—isang pinong tuldok ng pananaw—nakikita niya ang mas mataas na katotohanan sa gitna ng hinabing mga balangkas ng daigdig.”
याज्ञवल्क्य उवाच
True understanding is not gained by grasping the whole ‘web’ of appearances, but by cultivating a subtle, focused insight—through which one can directly perceive the higher truth beyond worldly constructions.
In Śānti Parva’s didactic setting, Yājñavalkya instructs through a vivid analogy: the spider and its web illustrate how the mind’s structures can both obscure and, when rightly ‘opened’ by discernment, become a means to perceive what is otherwise distant or hidden.