Saṃsāra-duḥkha: Karmic Descent, Garbhavāsa, Life’s Anxieties, Death, and the Call to Jñāna-Bhakti
बाल्यभावमासाद्य मातापित्रोरुपाध्यायस्य ताडनं सदा पर्यटनशीलत्वं पांशुभस्मपंकादिषुक्रीडनं सदा कलहनियतत्वाम शुचित्वं बहुव्यापाराभासकार्यनियतत्वं तदसंभव आध्यात्मिकदुःखमेवंविधमनुभवति ॥ २६ ॥
bālyabhāvamāsādya mātāpitrorupādhyāyasya tāḍanaṃ sadā paryaṭanaśīlatvaṃ pāṃśubhasmapaṃkādiṣukrīḍanaṃ sadā kalahaniyatatvāma śucitvaṃ bahuvyāpārābhāsakāryaniyatatvaṃ tadasaṃbhava ādhyātmikaduḥkhamevaṃvidhamanubhavati || 26 ||
陷入孩童之性时,便经历如此内在(ādhyātmika)之苦:常被父母与师长责打,习于四处游荡,在尘土、灰烬与泥浆中嬉戏,恒常争吵,住于不净,又无休止地忙于种种“似有作为”的事务,却无真实成就。
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a didactic context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: hasya
It identifies immature, restless, and impure habits as direct causes of ādhyātmika-duḥkha (inner suffering), implying that spiritual progress begins with disciplined conduct, cleanliness, and steadiness.
Bhakti requires a stable and purified mind; the verse shows that quarrelsomeness, aimless roaming, and impurity scatter attention and prevent genuine practice—so ethical restraint becomes supportive groundwork for sustained devotion.
Indirectly, it underscores śikṣā and ācāra (discipline and proper conduct) as prerequisites for learning; without steadiness and purity, study and practice become only ‘ābhāsa’—a mere appearance of activity without real attainment.