Janaka Instructs Śuka: Āśrama-Sequence, Guru-Dependence, and Marks of Liberation
नास्ति ते सुखदुःखेषु विशेषो नास्ति वस्तुषु । नौत्सुक्यं नृत्यगीतेषु न राग उपजायते ॥ ४५ ॥
nāsti te sukhaduḥkheṣu viśeṣo nāsti vastuṣu | nautsukyaṃ nṛtyagīteṣu na rāga upajāyate || 45 ||
于你而言,乐与苦无有差别,对诸物亦无特别取舍;对舞与歌不生兴奋,内心亦不起执著之爱。
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada the marks of dispassion and steadiness in Moksha-dharma)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta (peace)
Secondary Rasa: none
It describes the inner hallmark of liberation-oriented maturity: equanimity toward pleasure and pain, and the fading of craving for sensory entertainments—clear signs of vairāgya supporting mokṣa.
By showing that when the heart is no longer pulled by rāga for worldly delights, it becomes steady and available for one-pointed remembrance and devotion; bhakti deepens as distractions lose their charm.
No specific Vedāṅga (like Vyākaraṇa, Jyotiṣa, or Śikṣā) is taught in this verse; the practical takeaway is ethical-psychological discipline—cultivating samatva and reducing sensory dependence as part of mokṣa-dharma.