Adhyaya 11 — The Son’s Discourse on Embryogenesis, Birth, and the Wheel of Saṃsāra
तेनाभिभूतं तत्स्थैर्यं याति बीजद्वयं पितः ।
कललत्वं बुद्बुदत्वं ततः पेशित्वमेव च ॥
tenābhibhūtaṃ tat sthairyaṃ yāti bījadvayaṃ pitaḥ | kalalatvaṃ budbudatvaṃ tataḥ peśitvam eva ca ||
Ô père, sous l’emprise de ce processus, les deux semences parviennent à un état déterminé : d’abord elles deviennent « kalala » (une masse gélatineuse), puis « budbuda » (une forme semblable à une bulle), et ensuite, véritablement, « peśī » (un amas charnu).
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The body is shown as a gradual formation from subtle causes into gross form, encouraging detachment from bodily pride and a reflective attitude toward embodied life.
A sarga-analog at the individual scale (formation of the body), serving the purāṇic educational role.
The sequential ‘condensation’ (kalala → budbuda → peśī) can be read as the progressive crystallization of karma into form—subtle tendencies taking structured embodiment.