Anadhyaya and the Winds: From Vedic Recitation Protocol to Sanatkumara’s Moksha-Upadesha
यदा सर्वं परित्यज्य गंतव्यमवशेन वै । अनर्थे किं प्रसक्तस्त्वं स्वमर्थं नानुतिष्टसि ॥ ६८ ॥
yadā sarvaṃ parityajya gaṃtavyamavaśena vai | anarthe kiṃ prasaktastvaṃ svamarthaṃ nānutiṣṭasi || 68 ||
Kapag darating ang oras na kailangan mong umalis nang walang magawa, iniiwan ang lahat—bakit ka nakakapit sa walang saysay? Bakit hindi mo isinasagawa ang tunay na kabutihan para sa iyong sarili?
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: vira (heroic)
Secondary Rasa: shanta (peace)
It urges vairagya (dispassion) by reminding that death forces everyone to leave all possessions, so one should seek the lasting goal—paramārtha, liberation.
By rejecting anartha (worthless pursuits), it implicitly redirects the mind to the true artha—service and remembrance of the Supreme (commonly framed in the Narada Purana as Vishnu-bhakti), which survives beyond bodily departure.
No specific Vedanga is taught here; the practical takeaway is ethical discernment (viveka): prioritize the puruṣārtha of moksha over transient gains, which can guide one’s choices in ritual, study, and daily conduct.
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