An Exposition of the Distinctions of Creation, Inert Matter, and the Lord
सम्यक् भवति पक्षीन्द्र तथैकांशेन चाण्डज / तमोराश्या मिश्रितं च भवत्येव न संशयः
samyak bhavati pakṣīndra tathaikāṃśena cāṇḍaja / tamorāśyā miśritaṃ ca bhavatyeva na saṃśayaḥ
Oh señor de las aves, oh nacido del huevo, así mismo se forma correctamente; pero en una parte se halla ciertamente mezclado con una masa de oscuridad, de tamas: de ello no hay duda.
Lord Vishnu
Concept: Even when properly constituted, one portion is mixed with tamas (a ‘mass of darkness’), indicating inherent guṇa-admixture.
Vedantic Theme: Prakṛti’s guṇas are inseparable in manifestation; purity in the phenomenal is relative, not absolute.
Application: Recognize tamas as a predictable component in embodied life (inertia, confusion); counterbalance through sāttvika habits and reflective awareness rather than denial.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.4.41; Garuda Purana 3.4.43; Garuda Purana 3.4.45
This verse emphasizes that even when something is properly constituted, a portion can remain mixed with tamas, indicating the persistent influence of spiritual inertia and obscuration that must be overcome through dharma and right knowledge.
By pointing to a mixture with tamas, it suggests why the jiva can experience confusion, attachment, and karmic bondage—factors that shape post-death outcomes and the need for purification.
Recognize tamasic tendencies (laziness, delusion, harmful habits) and counter them with sattvic discipline—ethical living, study, prayer, and mindful actions that reduce inner darkness.