amÄny amatsaro dakᚣo
nirmamo dášá¸ha-sauhášdaḼ
asatvaro 'rtha-jijĂąÄsur
anasĹŤyur amogha-vÄk
amÄnÄŤ - without false ego; amatsaraḼ - not considering oneself to be the doer; dakᚣaḼ - without laziness; nirmamaḼ - without any sense of proprietorship over one's wife, children, home, society, etc.; dášá¸ha-sauhášdaḼ - being fixed in the mood of loving friendship with the spiritual master, who is one's worshipable deity; asatvaraḼ - without becoming bewildered due to material passion; artha-jijĂąÄsuḼ - desiring knowledge of the Absolute Truth; anasĹŤyuḼ - free from envy; amogha-vÄk - completely free from useless conversation.
No one can claim to be the permanent proprietor of his so-called wife, family, home, society, and so on. Such material relationships appear and disappear like bubbles on the surface of the ocean. No one can claim to be the creator of the material elements that produced oneâs home, society and family. If it were a fact that parents were the ultimate creators of the bodies of their children, children would never die before their parents; the parents would simply create new bodies for the children. Similarly, parents would also not die, because they would create new bodies for themselves to replace the old ones. Actually, God creates everyoneâs bodies as well as the material elements with which we build our material societies. Therefore, before death drags these things out of our grasp, we should voluntarily engage them in the loving service of the spiritual master, who is the bona fide representative of Lord KášášŁáša. Then such material objects, instead of causing lamentation, will be the cause of happiness.