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Canto-3, chapter-30-31 of Shrimad Bhagwat Mahapuran
Kapila said: 'Just like a mass of clouds has no knowledge of the
powerful wind, a person has no knowledge of this time factor, even though
he is being conditioned by it. Whatever the goods are
that one with difficulty acquired for one's happiness are destroyed
by the Supreme Lord [in the form of Time] and because of this the person
laments. In his ignorance he foolishly thinks that the temporality of having a
home, land and wealth for the sake of his body, would be something permanent. The
living being finding its satisfaction in this worldly existence, will
irrespective the birth that was acquired, be in consonance with it. Even
physically living in hell a person, who in truth is deluded by the illusory
material potency of God, does not want to give up his hellish pleasures. With
his body, wife, children, home, animals, wealth and friendships deeply rooted
in his heart, he thinks of himself as being a great success. Burning with
anxiety about maintaining all the members of his dear family, he is constantly
of sin and with a bad mind acting like a fool. With his heart
and senses charmed by a woman he sees in private and by the
display of the sweet words of his children, he is of the falsehood of
the outer illusion [of non-permanent matters being eternal]. Involved
in the household duties of his family life that gives rise to all kinds of
trouble, he is busy countering these miseries attentively and thinks that that
will make him happy as a householder. By means of the wealth
that here and there with violence [and victims] was secured, he maintains his
family, but he goes down himself when he for his own maintenance may eat what
was left over from the meal. When he time and again ruled by greed
[enviously] desires the wealth that is enjoyed by others, he himself gets
into trouble in exercising his profession and is thus ruined No
longer capable of maintaining his family the unfortunate wretch bereft of
wealth and beauty then sighs with a bewildered intelligence full of
grief over everything he tried in vain.
No longer capable of maintaining his wife and so on, he finds himself not respected as before, just as an old ox is not respected the same way by his farmer. Even though he now is maintained by those he once maintained, he doesn't develop any aversion. He, getting deformed of old age, rather stays at home to await his death. There he remains and eats like a pet dog that what indifferently is placed before him and falls sick with indigestion, eating little and doing little. Because of the inner pressure his eyes bulge out and with his windpipe congested with mucus he coughs and has difficulty breathing, only saying 'ugha ugha'. Lying down surrounded by his lamenting friends and relatives he, unconscious in the grip of the noose of time, cannot speak although it's the time for it. Thus, having engrossed in maintaining his family, he has no control over his mind and senses and dies in great pain, while his relatives cry as he passes away. Witnessing the arrival of the servants of death with their terrible eyes full of wrath he because of the fear in his heart passes stool and urine. They like the king's soldiers immobilize his body by binding him in ropes for his punishment and then drag him like a criminal forcefully by the neck over a long distance. In his heart broken by their threatening presence he, overtaken, trembles on the road and is bitten by dogs in the distress of remembering his sins. Afflicted by hunger, thirst and the radiation of scorching forest fires and winds on hot and sandy roads, he feels how he painfully is beaten on his back with a whip, while he unable to move finds no refuge or water. Falling now and then he gets tired and loses consciousness, and then reawakens on the road of his misery where he quickly is led before the eternal ruler of death [Yamarâja]. He sees his entire life pass by in a few moments [he passes 'ninety-nine thousand yojanas'] and then receives the punishment he deserves. Then with his limbs covered by firewood he is cremated or sometimes sees that he eats his own flesh or that it is done by other creatures. Vividly he then witnesses how dogs pull out his entrails at his last resting place where serpents, scorpions, gnats and so on pester him to his abhorrence. He sees how one by one his limbs come off being seized by big and small animals who tear him apart, throw him from heights or drag him under water or into caves. Because of loose association [not being of a steady sexual relationship] one must, whether one is a man or a woman, undergo the requital in hellish states of anger, self-destruction and bewilderment [tâmisra, andha-tâmisra and raurava and such,
Oh mother, because one can observe [the downside of] these hellish pains here, one speaks of [finding] heaven as well as hell in this world. He who thus [in greed, attachment and infidelity] maintained his family or lived for his stomach only, will upon leaving this world after he died have to face the consequences for himself as also for his family. After quitting this vehicle of time he will enter the darkness all alone and pay the price for the harm that he in the care of his own interest did to others in envy of their fortune. By divine ordinance the man sustaining a family has to undergo the hellish condition that resulted from his foul play, just like someone who lost his wealth. Someone who in his eagerness to care for his family is simply godless in his actions, thus heads for the darkest region of self-destruction [andha-tâmisra]. After he beginning from the lowest position [of an animal existence] prior to a human birth in due order has underwent all the requital and such, he being purified may again return to the human world on this planet.'
No longer capable of maintaining his wife and so on, he finds himself not respected as before, just as an old ox is not respected the same way by his farmer. Even though he now is maintained by those he once maintained, he doesn't develop any aversion. He, getting deformed of old age, rather stays at home to await his death. There he remains and eats like a pet dog that what indifferently is placed before him and falls sick with indigestion, eating little and doing little. Because of the inner pressure his eyes bulge out and with his windpipe congested with mucus he coughs and has difficulty breathing, only saying 'ugha ugha'. Lying down surrounded by his lamenting friends and relatives he, unconscious in the grip of the noose of time, cannot speak although it's the time for it. Thus, having engrossed in maintaining his family, he has no control over his mind and senses and dies in great pain, while his relatives cry as he passes away. Witnessing the arrival of the servants of death with their terrible eyes full of wrath he because of the fear in his heart passes stool and urine. They like the king's soldiers immobilize his body by binding him in ropes for his punishment and then drag him like a criminal forcefully by the neck over a long distance. In his heart broken by their threatening presence he, overtaken, trembles on the road and is bitten by dogs in the distress of remembering his sins. Afflicted by hunger, thirst and the radiation of scorching forest fires and winds on hot and sandy roads, he feels how he painfully is beaten on his back with a whip, while he unable to move finds no refuge or water. Falling now and then he gets tired and loses consciousness, and then reawakens on the road of his misery where he quickly is led before the eternal ruler of death [Yamarâja]. He sees his entire life pass by in a few moments [he passes 'ninety-nine thousand yojanas'] and then receives the punishment he deserves. Then with his limbs covered by firewood he is cremated or sometimes sees that he eats his own flesh or that it is done by other creatures. Vividly he then witnesses how dogs pull out his entrails at his last resting place where serpents, scorpions, gnats and so on pester him to his abhorrence. He sees how one by one his limbs come off being seized by big and small animals who tear him apart, throw him from heights or drag him under water or into caves. Because of loose association [not being of a steady sexual relationship] one must, whether one is a man or a woman, undergo the requital in hellish states of anger, self-destruction and bewilderment [tâmisra, andha-tâmisra and raurava and such,
Oh mother, because one can observe [the downside of] these hellish pains here, one speaks of [finding] heaven as well as hell in this world. He who thus [in greed, attachment and infidelity] maintained his family or lived for his stomach only, will upon leaving this world after he died have to face the consequences for himself as also for his family. After quitting this vehicle of time he will enter the darkness all alone and pay the price for the harm that he in the care of his own interest did to others in envy of their fortune. By divine ordinance the man sustaining a family has to undergo the hellish condition that resulted from his foul play, just like someone who lost his wealth. Someone who in his eagerness to care for his family is simply godless in his actions, thus heads for the darkest region of self-destruction [andha-tâmisra]. After he beginning from the lowest position [of an animal existence] prior to a human birth in due order has underwent all the requital and such, he being purified may again return to the human world on this planet.'
Lord Kapila's Instructions on the Wanderings of the Living
Entities
The Supreme Lord said: 'Because of its karma the living entity
as ordained by God through the particle of semen of a man enters the womb
of a woman in order to dwell there for obtaining a body. On the first
night the sperm and ovum mix, at the fifth night there is a bubble and in about
ten days it is thereafter like a plum, lump of flesh or an egg. Within
a month a head appears and within two months limbs like arms and feet form. The
nails, [the beginnings of] hair, bones, skin, reproductive organs and the
apertures appear within three months. In about four months the seven
ingredients separate [body-fluids and other elements], in five months feelings
like hunger and thirst occur and in six months the fetus starts to move
around at the right in the amnion [males at the right, females at the left
so one says]. From the nutrition taken from the mother the body of the
fetus grows as it stays in that impossible hollow whereabout stool and urine
form a breeding place for germs. All the time aching for food, it is,
being so tender, affected by infestations ['worms'] and thus all over its body
has to suffer a great deal residing there, moment after moment lapsing into
unconsciousness. The living being because of the excessive
bitterness, heat, pungency, saltiness, dryness, the sourness etc. of the food
taken by the mother, is affected in every limb and thus feels pain. Enclosed
by the amnion in that place surrounded by the intestines it lies with a
bent neck and back arched with its head in its belly. Like a
bird in a cage with no freedom of movement, it [the soul] still remembers
- when it is lucky - what has happened in all its hundreds of births.
Remembering such a long history it may sigh over them, for what peace of mind
can it then achieve? From the seventh month on it is endowed with
consciousness, but at the same time pushed down by the pressure of the womb
where it cannot stay, just like the worm stemming from the same belly.
The fearful living entity bound to its seven constituents [nails, skin, fat, flesh, blood, bone, marrow], then in its disgust, with folded hands and words of prayer, appeals to the Lord who placed him in that womb. The human soul says: 'May He protect me who protects the entire universe and who with assuming His different forms walks the earth with His lotus feet. Let me take refuge in that shelter that will take my fears away, in Him who decided that I deservedthis untrue condition. I, the pure soul covered by the grossness of matter which consists of the elements, the senses and the mind, have because of my being bound to activities, fallen into this delusional state [mâyâ]. Let me offer my obeisances so that I may hold on to the completely pure Changeless One of unlimited knowledge who resides in the heart of the repentant one. I am, contrary to what it should be, [as a spiritual soul] separated by the covering of this material body that is made of the five elements and based upon senses, material preferences [gunas], interests and cognitions, and so I offer my obeisances to You, the Supreme Person transcendental to material nature and its living entities, whose glories are not obscured by such a material body. By the deluding quality of Your outer appearance this body that by the modes and its karma is bound to wander on the path of repeated birth and death, has to suffer considerably with a spoilt memory. May again this entity realize Your true nature. How else would one find Your divine mercy? What else but Your divinity, that as a partial representation [the Paramâtmâ] dwells in both the animate and the inanimate, would give us the knowledge of the threefold of Time, of past, present and future? In order to be freed from the threefold misery [as caused by oneself, nature and others] we as individual souls engaged on the path of fruitive activities have to surrender to that divinity. Embodied within the abdomen of another body, having fallen into a pool of blood, stool and urine and strongly scorched by gastric fire, this [individual soul with its] body desiring to leave that place, counts his months when it as a miser will be released oh Lord. You granted me, [not even] ten months old oh Lord, [the light of] Your incomparable, supreme mercy. What else can I do but to pray in return with folded hands in gratitude for that incomparable and unique grace of You who are the refuge of the fallen ones? This living being can, from its bondage to the seven layers of matter, only understand what is agreeable and disagreeable, but by You endowed with another body of self-control within myself, I am really able to recognize inside of me You, the original person who constitutes the inner guidance, as residing within my heart as well as outside of me. Oh Almighty One, even though I who has to live with all the miseries outside of this abdomen, rather not depart from here to land in that pitfall, I [just as everyone] who enters this world at once will be captured by Your mâyâ and be entangled in the false identification [of the ego] that is fundamental to the eternal cycle of birth and death. Therefore I will, well-disposed to the soul no longer being agitated, deliver myself quickly again from that darkness, by placing the feet of Lord Vishnu in my heart and thus spare me this fate of having to enter so many wombs.'
The fearful living entity bound to its seven constituents [nails, skin, fat, flesh, blood, bone, marrow], then in its disgust, with folded hands and words of prayer, appeals to the Lord who placed him in that womb. The human soul says: 'May He protect me who protects the entire universe and who with assuming His different forms walks the earth with His lotus feet. Let me take refuge in that shelter that will take my fears away, in Him who decided that I deservedthis untrue condition. I, the pure soul covered by the grossness of matter which consists of the elements, the senses and the mind, have because of my being bound to activities, fallen into this delusional state [mâyâ]. Let me offer my obeisances so that I may hold on to the completely pure Changeless One of unlimited knowledge who resides in the heart of the repentant one. I am, contrary to what it should be, [as a spiritual soul] separated by the covering of this material body that is made of the five elements and based upon senses, material preferences [gunas], interests and cognitions, and so I offer my obeisances to You, the Supreme Person transcendental to material nature and its living entities, whose glories are not obscured by such a material body. By the deluding quality of Your outer appearance this body that by the modes and its karma is bound to wander on the path of repeated birth and death, has to suffer considerably with a spoilt memory. May again this entity realize Your true nature. How else would one find Your divine mercy? What else but Your divinity, that as a partial representation [the Paramâtmâ] dwells in both the animate and the inanimate, would give us the knowledge of the threefold of Time, of past, present and future? In order to be freed from the threefold misery [as caused by oneself, nature and others] we as individual souls engaged on the path of fruitive activities have to surrender to that divinity. Embodied within the abdomen of another body, having fallen into a pool of blood, stool and urine and strongly scorched by gastric fire, this [individual soul with its] body desiring to leave that place, counts his months when it as a miser will be released oh Lord. You granted me, [not even] ten months old oh Lord, [the light of] Your incomparable, supreme mercy. What else can I do but to pray in return with folded hands in gratitude for that incomparable and unique grace of You who are the refuge of the fallen ones? This living being can, from its bondage to the seven layers of matter, only understand what is agreeable and disagreeable, but by You endowed with another body of self-control within myself, I am really able to recognize inside of me You, the original person who constitutes the inner guidance, as residing within my heart as well as outside of me. Oh Almighty One, even though I who has to live with all the miseries outside of this abdomen, rather not depart from here to land in that pitfall, I [just as everyone] who enters this world at once will be captured by Your mâyâ and be entangled in the false identification [of the ego] that is fundamental to the eternal cycle of birth and death. Therefore I will, well-disposed to the soul no longer being agitated, deliver myself quickly again from that darkness, by placing the feet of Lord Vishnu in my heart and thus spare me this fate of having to enter so many wombs.'
Kapila said: 'Thus desiring from within the womb, the [almost] ten
months old living entity extols the Lord at the time of being pushed downwards
by the pressure of labor to take birth. Because of that pressure the
child with its head turned downwards suddenly, with great difficulty and bereft
of all memory, comes out breathless. Like a worm falling down to
earth it smeared with blood moves its limbs and cries loudly now it has lost
the wisdom in reaching the opposite [material] position. Being
maintained by its folks who do not understand what it wants it, not being
able to refuse, has fallen into circumstances it did not desire. Laying
down in fouled linen [dirty diapers etc.] the child is pestered by germs
[suffering rashes on its body] it cannot scratch away from its limbs, for it is
not able to sit, stand or move around. Flies, mosquitos, bugs and other
creatures bite the baby its tender skin and being just like vermin pestered by
other vermin, it, deprived of wisdom, cries. This way undergoing
infancy in distress and even in its childhood out of its ignorance not
achieving what it wants, it gets angry and sad. As a lusty
person being destructive towards other lusty people it with the pride of
its developing body, because of that anger, then develops enmity at
the cost of the soul. The embodied soul in ignorance holding on to
non-permanent things then constantly reasons from the physical reality made of
the five elements and thus thinks foolishly in terms of 'I' and 'mine'. Engaged
in actions in the service of the body he because of his bondage to
the dark motives of fruitive labor is followed by trouble [consisting of
the so-called kles'as] and time and again moves in the
direction of yet another birth in the material world. When he
on the materialistic path again [only] is interested in human association for
the sake of the pleasure of his genitals and his stomach, the living entity
lands in darkness as before. For associated thus he loses his sense
of truth, purity, compassion and gravity, his spiritual intelligence,
prosperity, modesty and his good name, as also his mercy, the control over his
mind and senses and his fortune. One should not seek association
with coarse and immoral fools bereft of self-realization who like pitiable dogs
dance to the tune of the ladies. Nothing in the world makes a man as
infatuated and dependent as the association with a man who is attached to women
or with a fellowship of men fond of women. The father of man
[Brahmâ] bewildered at the sight of his own daughter as a stag shamelessly ran after
her when he saw her in the form of a deer. Except for sage Nârâyana, among
all the living entities born from Brahmâ there is not a single man
whose intelligence is not distracted by mâyâ in the form of a
woman.
Behold the strength of My mâyâ in the shape of a
woman that even makes the conquerors of the world follow her closely behind by
the mere movement of an eyebrow. One who aspires to reach the
culmination of yoga should never develop worldly attachment to a [young,
attractive] woman; they say that to someone who arrived at self-realization in
My service, thus associating with her is the gateway to hell. The woman
created by God is as an overgrown well [one falls into when one is inattentive],
she represents the slowly encroachingmâyâ, the illusory power of the
material world which one must regard as death to the soul. She who
from being attached to women [in his previous life] became a woman, due to
illusion in regard of My mâyâ thinks that aiming at the form
of a man [her husband] will bring her wealth, progeny and a house. She
[on her turn] should consider His mâyâ consisting of her
husband, children and house, as death brought about by the authority of God
alike the call of a hunter. Because the person incessantly delights in
working for the fruit of his actions, the embodied individual soul wanders from
one world to the other. Thus he gets a suitable body composed of the
material elements, the senses and the mind. When that comes to an end it is
called death but when it manifests one speaks of birth. When one
[staring in meditation] cannot perceive the fixed position of an object that
implies the death of one's sense perception, and when one regards the body as
being oneself that implies one's birth [in a material sense]. He who perceives
cannot at the same time regard an object as well as the witness of the
perception himself, just as the eyes are not capable either to see at once all
the different parts of a single object. One must not be horrified about
death, one must not stingily cherish poverty nor be concerned about any
material gain; when one understands the true nature of the living being one
should on this planet move about steadfast and free from attachment. When
one relegates one's body to this world composed of mâyâ one
should, endowed with the right vision, move around therein in detachment basing
oneself upon reason in being connected in the science of the [three forms of]
yoga.'
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