The Six Dvīpas Beyond Jambūdvīpa and the Cosmic Boundary of Lokāloka
यावन्मानसोत्तरमेर्वोरन्तरं तावती भूमि: काञ्चन्यन्याऽऽदर्शतलोपमा यस्यां प्रहित: पदार्थो न कथञ्चित्पुन: प्रत्युपलभ्यते तस्मात्सर्वसत्त्वपरिहृतासीत् ॥ ३५ ॥
yāvan mānasottara-mervor antaraṁ tāvatī bhūmiḥ kāñcany anyādarśa-talopamā yasyāṁ prahitaḥ padārtho na kathañcit punaḥ pratyupalabhyate tasmāt sarva-sattva-parihṛtāsīt.
Beyond the ocean of sweet water is a tract of land as broad as the area between the middle of Mount Sumeru and the boundary of Mānasottara Mountain. In that tract of land there are many living beings. Beyond it, extending to Lokāloka Mountain, is another land, which is made of gold. Because of its golden surface, it reflects light like the surface of a mirror, and any physical article that falls on that land can never be perceived again. All living entities, therefore, have abandoned that golden land.
It describes a golden, mirror-like region between Mānasottara and Meru where anything thrown cannot be recovered, so living beings avoid it.
Śukadeva Gosvāmī is narrating these details to Mahārāja Parīkṣit as part of the Fifth Canto’s description of the universe.
It reminds us that certain realms and experiences are beyond ordinary control—encouraging humility, careful choices, and reliance on dharma and devotion rather than reckless experimentation.