Dhruva’s Darśana, Transformative Prayers, and the Boon of the Dhruva-loka
Pole Star
प्रस्थिते तु वनं पित्रा दत्त्वा गां धर्मसंश्रय: । षट्-त्रिंशद्वर्षसाहस्रं रक्षिताव्याहतेन्द्रिय: ॥ २२ ॥
prasthite tu vanaṁ pitrā dattvā gāṁ dharma-saṁśrayaḥ ṣaṭ-triṁśad-varṣa-sāhasraṁ rakṣitāvyāhatendriyaḥ
حين يمضي أبوك إلى الغابة ويُسَلِّم إليك مُلك المملكة، ستتولى الحكم مستندًا إلى الدَّرْمَا، وتحكم الأرض كلَّها بلا انقطاع ستةً وثلاثين ألف سنة. وستبقى حواسّك قوية كما هي الآن، ولن يدركك الهرم.
In the Satya-yuga people generally lived for one hundred thousand years. Dhruva Mahārāja’s ruling the world for thirty-six thousand years was quite possible in those days.
This verse presents Dhruva as an ideal ruler: after inheriting the kingdom, he took shelter of dharma and protected the earth for a vast span of time with disciplined, self-controlled senses.
In the narrative, after Dhruva’s spiritual success and return, Uttanapada withdrew from worldly rule toward renunciation, entrusting governance to Dhruva, who was firmly established in dharma.
The verse links steady leadership with steady senses—practically, cultivate restraint (habits, speech, consumption) so responsibilities can be carried out without being driven by impulse.