Self-Knowledge and the Allegory of the Five Elements & Senses
Karma, Association, and Rebirth
अभिमानेन दुःखेन मानभंगेन सत्तम । महादुःखेन संतप्ता करिष्ये प्राणमोचनम्
abhimānena duḥkhena mānabhaṃgena sattama | mahāduḥkhena saṃtaptā kariṣye prāṇamocanam
يا خيرَ الرجال، لقد عُذِّبتُ بحزنٍ وُلِدَ من الكِبْر وبانكسارِ كرامتي، واحترقتُ بغمٍّ عظيم؛ فسأُنهي حياتي.
Unspecified in the provided excerpt (a distressed female speaker implied by saṃtaptā).
Concept: Honor and pride, when absolutized, can drive one toward self-harm; dharma calls for preserving life and seeking pacification through right counsel and devotion.
Application: When shame or pride triggers suicidal thoughts, immediately seek protection—trusted elders, spiritual counsel, and grounding practices; replace ‘honor’ fixation with values-based living.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A distressed woman stands at the edge of a precipice or near a dark riverbank, hands trembling, eyes reddened by tears, her posture collapsing under the weight of shattered honor. A compassionate figure (the ‘best of men’) is positioned slightly behind, reaching out—not forcefully, but with steady presence that can avert tragedy.","primary_figures":["a distressed woman (unnamed speaker)","a noble man addressed as sattama"],"setting":"twilight riverbank or cliffside near a hermitage path, with ominous water or depth below","lighting_mood":"moonlit","color_palette":["midnight blue","ashen violet","silver","deep maroon","pale saffron"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: dramatic moment at a riverbank—woman in sorrowful pose, ornaments loosened, tears rendered as pearl-like drops; the sattama extending a calming hand; gold leaf used for moon halo and water highlights, rich maroon-green borders, intense facial expressions within traditional iconographic framing.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: lyrical yet tragic twilight landscape with a dark river, slender trees, and a woman poised in despair; subtle gradients in the sky, delicate linework for tears and trembling hands; the noble figure calm, slightly behind, creating a gentle diagonal of rescue.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: high-contrast panel—woman with wide expressive eyes, body angled toward the water; the sattama in steady stance; bold outlines, natural pigments, stylized waves and lotus motifs, a crescent moon above emphasizing the crisis.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: allegorical composition—central vignette of the despairing woman framed by lotus and tulasi borders; surrounding motifs of dark clouds and peacocks; deep indigo ground with silver-gold accents, suggesting the soul’s night before counsel restores dharma."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"fast-dramatic","voice_tone":"emotional","sound_elements":["rushing water","distant thunder","sudden silence between phrases"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: मानभंगेन = मान + भंगेन; महादुःखेन = महा + दुःखेन; प्राणमोचनम् = प्राण + मोचनम्.
The verse centers on despair arising from abhimāna (pride/ego) and mānabhaṅga (loss or breaking of honor), leading to a suicidal resolve.
It warns that excessive identification with honor and ego can intensify suffering and drive harmful decisions; steadiness and discernment are implied antidotes.
Not directly. This shloka is primarily psychological and ethical in tone, expressing grief and humiliation rather than describing sacred geography or explicit devotional practice.