हा वयं योगविभ्रष्टाः कामतः कर्मबन्धनाः एवं विलप्य बहुशस् त्रयस्ते योगपारगाः //
hā vayaṃ yogavibhraṣṭāḥ kāmataḥ karmabandhanāḥ evaṃ vilapya bahuśas trayaste yogapāragāḥ //
« Hélas ! Nous sommes déchus du Yoga ; par le désir nous sommes enchaînés par l’action (karma). » Ainsi, se lamentant maintes et maintes fois, parlèrent ces trois-là, qui jadis avaient atteint l’autre rive du Yoga.
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.