आत्यन्तिक-लयहेतुः: तापत्रय-विवेचनम् तथा ‘भगवान्/वासुदेव’ शब्दार्थः
Threefold Suffering and the Path to Final Liberation; Meaning of Bhagavān and Vāsudeva
प्रक्षीणाखिलशौचश् च विहाराहारसस्पृहः हास्यः परिजनस्यापि निर्विण्णाशेषबान्धवः
prakṣīṇākhilaśaucaś ca vihārāhārasaspṛhaḥ hāsyaḥ parijanasyāpi nirviṇṇāśeṣabāndhavaḥ
ذبلت طهارته القديمة وعباداته، وصار شرِهًا للهو والطعـام. وغدا موضع سخرية حتى لأهل بيته، وأضحى فاترًا تجاه جميع أقاربه بلا استثناء.
Sage Parāśara (narrating to Maitreya)
Speaker: Parasara
Topic: How aging erodes śauca and self-control, producing ridicule and familial alienation
Teaching: Ethical
Quality: authoritative
Concept: As discipline wanes, cravings for food and diversion intensify, and one becomes contemptible—showing that unchecked desire degrades dignity.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma
Application: Maintain basic observances (cleanliness, moderation, truthfulness) and reduce sense-indulgence to preserve clarity for bhakti and contemplation.
Vishishtadvaita: Ethical discipline (ācāra) supports bhakti; as the body-mind complex weakens, intentional reliance on the Lord and regulated life becomes essential.
Vishnu Form: Hari
Bhakti Type: Shanta
The verse treats śauca as a foundation of dharma; when purity and disciplined conduct decay, a person becomes driven by appetite and pleasure, losing dignity and moral authority even within the family.
Parāśara presents indulgence (saspṛhā toward vihāra and āhāra) as a visible marker of inner decline—leading to social contempt (becoming hāsyaḥ) and the breakdown of responsible relationships.
Implicitly, the verse contrasts disorderly appetite with dharmic order upheld under Vishnu’s sovereignty; personal self-rule and purity align the individual with the cosmic order (ṛta/dharma) that Vishnu preserves.