Dehānta (Cyavana) and Upapatti: Kāśyapa’s Questions and the Siddha’s Account of Death, Pain, and Karmic Re-embodiment
ततः सचेतनो जनन््तुर्नाभिजानाति किंचन । तमसा संवृतज्ञान: संवृतेष्वेव मर्मसु । स जीवो निरधिष्ठानक्षाल्यते मातरिश्वना
tataḥ sacetano jantur nābhijānāti kiṃcana | tamasā saṃvṛtajñānaḥ saṃvṛteṣv eva marmaṣu | sa jīvo niradhiṣṭhānaḥ kṣālyate mātariśvanā ||
তেতিয়া অন্তকাল উপস্থিত হ’লে প্ৰাণী সচেতন হৈ থাকিলেও একো বুজি নাপায়। তম (অবিদ্যা) তাৰ জ্ঞানশক্তিক আৱৰণ কৰে আৰু মর্মস্থানসমূহো যেন ৰুদ্ধ হৈ যায়। সেই সময়ত জীৱৰ কোনো আধাৰ নাথাকে; মাতৰিশ্বা (প্ৰাণবায়ু) তাক তাৰ স্থানৰ পৰা বিচলিত কৰি দিয়ে।
सिद्ध उवाच
At the time of death, ignorance (tamas/avidyā) can eclipse discernment so thoroughly that even a conscious being cannot comprehend what is happening. The verse highlights human helplessness when inner clarity is absent, implying an ethical urgency: cultivate knowledge, self-control, and spiritual steadiness before the final moment, rather than relying on lucidity at the end.
A Siddha describes the dying condition: the creature’s cognition is covered by tamas, the vital junctions (marmas) are obstructed, and the jīva—lacking a stable support—is swept away by Mātariśvan (the wind/life-breath), i.e., the departing prāṇa dislodges the embodied self from its bodily seat.