Dāna as Prāyaścitta; Deathbed Gifts; Antyeṣṭi Procedures; Nārāyaṇa-bali for Untimely Deaths
श्रीकृष्ण उवाच / त्र्यहं प्रातस्त्र्यहं सायं त्र्यहमद्यादयाचितम् / उपवासस्त्र्यहञ्चैव एष कृच्छ्र उदाहृतः
śrīkṛṣṇa uvāca / tryahaṃ prātastryahaṃ sāyaṃ tryahamadyādayācitam / upavāsastryahañcaiva eṣa kṛcchra udāhṛtaḥ
قال شري كريشنا: ثلاثةَ أيامٍ يأكل المرء صباحًا، وثلاثةَ أيامٍ يأكل مساءً، وثلاثةَ أيامٍ لا يأكل إلا ما يأتيه من غير طلب، وثلاثةَ أيامٍ يصوم—فهذه هي كِرِتشرا المعلَنة ككفّارةٍ نسكية.
Śrī Kṛṣṇa (as the instructing divine speaker, identified with Lord Viṣṇu in Purāṇic discourse)
Concept: Kṛcchra prāyaścitta: a 12-day graduated discipline—morning meals (3), evening meals (3), unsolicited food only (3), then fasting (3).
Vedantic Theme: Karma-śuddhi through regulated consumption; mastery over indriyas as preparation for inner steadiness.
Application: If undertaking kṛcchra, follow the exact sequence and duration; maintain honesty in ‘ayācita’ (not soliciting) and steadiness in fasting.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 2.4.162 (question); Garuda Purana 2.4.164-165 (related kṛcchra variants)
This verse defines the structured kṛcchra penance—regulated eating followed by fasting—as a recognized method of purification and expiation within dharma-based practice.
By prescribing prāyaścitta, the text emphasizes that karmic burdens can be reduced through disciplined austerity, supporting ethical purification that is repeatedly linked with favorable post-death outcomes in Purāṇic teaching.
Adopt disciplined restraint—such as mindful eating, accepting simple food without craving, and periodic fasting—performed with sincerity and guidance, as a way to cultivate self-control and moral clarity.