अध्याय २८६ — पराशर-उपदेशः
Ethical Restraint, Mortality, and Karma
एतान् शोकभयोत्सेकान् मोहनान् सुखदुःखयो: । पश्यामि साक्षिवल्लोके देहस्यास्य विचेष्टनात्
etān śokabhayotsekān mohanān sukhaduḥkhayoḥ | paśyāmi sākṣivalloke dehasyāsya viceṣṭanāt ||
我在此世间如同旁观的见证者一般,观照这些力量——忧悲、恐惧与傲慢——它们以将众生抛入乐与苦之中而使其迷惑。只要此身仍在动转、仍有作为,我便观看这一切境况,而不与之认同。
समड़ उवाच
Grief, fear, and pride are identified as deluding mental forces that bind one to the oscillation of pleasure and pain. The instruction is to cultivate the stance of a witness (sākṣivat): observe these states as phenomena arising with bodily and mental activity, without taking them as the Self.
In the didactic discourse of Śānti Parva, the speaker (Samada) describes an inner discipline: while the body continues to act in the world, he maintains detached awareness, watching emotions and egoic surges as they arise, rather than being driven by them.