Nārada’s Instructions: Śrāddha, True Dharma, Contentment, Yoga, and Devotion-Centered Renunciation
नोचेत्प्रमत्तमसदिन्द्रियवाजिसूता नीत्वोत्पथं विषयदस्युषु निक्षिपन्ति । ते दस्यव: सहयसूतममुं तमोऽन्धे संसारकूप उरुमृत्युभये क्षिपन्ति ॥ ४६ ॥
nocet pramattam asad-indriya-vāji-sūtā nītvotpathaṁ viṣaya-dasyuṣu nikṣipanti te dasyavaḥ sahaya-sūtam amuṁ tamo ’ndhe saṁsāra-kūpa uru-mṛtyu-bhaye kṣipanti
যদি কোনোবাই অচ্যুত আৰু বলদেৱৰ শৰণ নলয়, তেন্তে অসাৱধানতাত ইন্দ্ৰিয় (ঘোঁৰা) আৰু বুদ্ধি (সাৰথি)—যি ভৌতিক কলুষলৈ প্ৰবণ—দেহ-ৰথক বিষয়ভোগৰ কুপথলৈ লৈ যায়। তেতিয়া ভোজন, নিদ্ৰা আৰু মৈথুন নামৰ বিষয়-ডাকুৱে ঘোঁৰা আৰু সাৰথিসহ সেই ৰথক অন্ধকাৰময় সংসাৰ-কূপত, পুনঃপুনঃ জন্ম-মৃত্যুৰ ভয়ংকৰ অৱস্থাত নিক্ষেপ কৰে।
Without the protection of Gaura-Nitāi — Kṛṣṇa and Balarāma — one cannot get out of the dark well of ignorance in material existence. This is indicated here by the word nocet, which means that one will always remain in the dark well of material existence. The living entity must get strength from Nitāi-Gaura, or Kṛṣṇa-Balarāma. Without the mercy of Nitāi-Gaura, there is no way to come out of this dark well of ignorance. As stated in the Caitanya-caritāmṛta ( Ādi 1.2) :
This verse says the senses can act like reckless horse-drivers, dragging a careless person onto the wrong path and into the hands of sense enjoyment, which ultimately throws one into the dark well of saṁsāra and repeated death.
Prahlāda uses the chariot metaphor to show that if the senses and their ‘drivers’ are wicked and unrestrained, they mislead the person (the rider) toward dangerous sense objects, resulting in bondage and suffering.
Practice mindful restraint—avoid triggers that inflame cravings, keep disciplined habits, and anchor the mind in devotion (hearing/chanting) so the senses serve dharma and bhakti rather than pulling you into harmful indulgence.