Matsya Purana — The Tale of Brahmadatta: Past-life Memory
हा वयं योगविभ्रष्टाः कामतः कर्मबन्धनाः एवं विलप्य बहुशस् त्रयस्ते योगपारगाः //
hā vayaṃ yogavibhraṣṭāḥ kāmataḥ karmabandhanāḥ evaṃ vilapya bahuśas trayaste yogapāragāḥ //
“Alas! We have fallen away from Yoga; through desire we have become bound by action (karma).” Thus lamenting again and again, those three—who had once crossed to the far shore of Yoga—(spoke).
This verse is not about cosmic pralaya; it teaches an inner, ethical causality: desire (kāma) pulls one from yoga and creates karmic bondage, a “personal dissolution” of spiritual steadiness.
It warns that indulgence in desire produces binding consequences; for a king or householder, the implied duty is disciplined restraint, right intention, and action aligned with dharma so that karma does not become a fetter.
No Vāstu or ritual procedure is specified here; the takeaway is preparatory—purity of mind and control of desire are foundational for any effective rite, vrata, or temple-related observance taught elsewhere in the Matsya Purana.