Akalamṛtyu-kāraṇa and Bāla Antyeṣṭi: Age-graded Funeral Rites, Śrāddha Types, and Sonship Duties
आकाशमेकं हि यथा चन्द्रादित्यौ यथैकतः / घटादिषु पृथक् सर्वं पश्य रूपं च तत्समम्
ākāśamekaṃ hi yathā candrādityau yathaikataḥ / ghaṭādiṣu pṛthak sarvaṃ paśya rūpaṃ ca tatsamam
De même que l’espace est réellement un, et que la lune et le soleil sont chacun un seul astre, ainsi—bien qu’il paraisse morcelé dans des pots et autres contenants—vois que tout est un, et que sa forme est identique partout.
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Apparent multiplicity is due to upādhi (limiting adjuncts); reality (like space) is one and undivided though seemingly partitioned by containers.
Vedantic Theme: Advaita-style upādhi-bheda: ghaṭākāśa/mahākāśa analogy; unity of essence beneath names and forms.
Application: Practice viveka: distinguish the unchanging substratum from changing forms; reduce identification with ‘containers’ (body, role, status) and cultivate equanimity.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: teaching setting (upadeśa)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana jñāna-oriented passages employing drṣṭānta (space/pot) to teach unity of ātman/brahman
It teaches that the underlying reality (like space) is one and unchanged, even when it seems divided by bodies or conditions—supporting detachment and right understanding of the self.
By emphasizing oneness beyond bodily 'containers,' it points to the soul’s continuity and the need to see beyond physical form—an essential mindset in Preta Kanda discussions of the subtle journey.
Practice seeing identity beyond external roles and the body; this reduces fear, grief, and ego-clinging, and supports dharmic living with steadiness.