नरक-निर्णयः, पाप-कर्म-फल-व्यवस्था, प्रायश्चित्त-क्रमः, तथा हरि-स्मरण-परमत्वम्
वेगी पूयवहं चैको याति मिष्टान्नभुङ् नरः
vegī pūyavahaṃ caiko yāti miṣṭānnabhuṅ naraḥ
যে ব্যক্তি অন্যকে না দিয়ে একাই মিষ্টান্ন ভোজন করে, সে দ্রুত 'পূয়বহ' নামক নরকে গমন করে।
Sage Parāśara (teaching Maitreya)
Speaker: Parasara
Topic: Consequences of selfish consumption and failure to share food as dharma
Teaching: Ethical
Quality: compassionate
Concept: Food is a sacred trust meant for sharing (atithi, dependents, beings); solitary indulgence that withholds rightful portions yields a corresponding impure destiny.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma
Application: Practice annadāna and mindful eating—set aside a share for others (people, animals, guests) and cultivate gratitude before consumption.
Vishishtadvaita: As the world is the Lord’s body (śarīra), serving beings through sharing sustenance becomes indirect service to Him; selfish consumption violates this relational dharma.
Pūyavaha is presented as a punitive realm (naraka) illustrating how specific moral failures—here, indulgent, self-centered eating—ripen into concrete karmic consequences.
In this naraka-catalog context, Parāśara frames it as eating choice foods in a self-serving way—treating nourishment as mere pleasure rather than a dharmic act that includes sharing, restraint, and reverence.
Even when Vishnu is not named in the verse, the teaching assumes a Vishnu-governed moral cosmos: dharma is upheld, karma bears fruit, and the universe’s order ultimately rests on the Supreme Reality who sustains law and consequence.