Srimad-Bhagavatam: Canto 4 - Chapter 1 - Verse 28
Sanskrit:
तत्पश्यतां खे भुवि चाद्भुतं महद्हाहेति वाद: सुमहानजायत ।हन्त प्रिया दैवतमस्य देवीजहावसून् केन सती प्रकोपिता ॥ २८ ॥
ITRANS:
tat paśyatāṁ khe bhuvi cādbhutaṁ mahadhā heti vādaḥ sumahān ajāyatahanta priyā daivatamasya devījahāv asūn kena satī prakopitā
Translation:
When Satī annihilated her body in anger, there was a tumultuous roar all over the universe. Why had Satī, the wife of the most respectable demigod, Lord Śiva, quit her body in such a manner?
Purport:
There was a tumultuous roaring all over the universe in the societies of the demigods of different planets because Satī was the daughter of Dakṣa, the greatest of all kings, and the wife of Lord Śiva, the greatest of all demigods. Why did she become so angry that she gave up her body? Since she was the daughter of a great personality and wife of a great personality, she had nothing to desire, but still she gave up her body in dissatisfaction. Certainly this was astonishing. One cannot attain complete satisfaction even if one is situated in the greatest material opulence. There was nothing Satī could not achieve either from her relationship with her father or from her relationship with the greatest of the demigods, but still, for some reason, she was dissatisfied. Therefore Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam (1.2.6) explains that one has to achieve real satisfaction (yayātmā suprasīdati), but ātmā — the body, mind and soul — all become completely satisfied only if one develops devotional service to the Absolute Truth (sa vai puṁsāṁ paro dharmo yato bhaktir adhokṣaje). Adhokṣaja means the Absolute Truth. If one can develop his unflinching love for the transcendental Supreme Personality of Godhead, that can give complete satisfaction; otherwise there is no possibility of satisfaction in the material world or anywhere else.