Saṃsāra-duḥkha: Karmic Descent, Garbhavāsa, Life’s Anxieties, Death, and the Call to Jñāna-Bhakti
यतस्तन्मातुः प्रसूतिसमये सति गर्भस्थोदेही नारदमुने वायुनापरिपीडितो मातुश्चापि दुःखं कुर्वन्कर्मपाशेन बलाद्योनिमार्गान्निष्क्रामन्सकलयातनाभोगमेककालभवमनुभवति ॥ २१ ॥
yatastanmātuḥ prasūtisamaye sati garbhasthodehī nāradamune vāyunāparipīḍito mātuścāpi duḥkhaṃ kurvankarmapāśena balādyonimārgānniṣkrāmansakalayātanābhogamekakālabhavamanubhavati || 21 ||
Ainsi, ô sage Nārada, au moment de l’accouchement, l’être incarné demeurant dans le sein est pressé et tourmenté par les souffles vitaux; et, faisant souffrir la mère elle aussi, il est contraint par les liens du karma de sortir par le passage de la naissance, éprouvant en un seul instant toute l’étendue des peines et des agonies.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
It highlights the jīva’s helplessness under karma-pāśa at the very moment of birth, urging vairāgya (detachment) and a liberation-oriented life that seeks freedom from saṁsāra’s inevitable suffering.
By stressing that birth itself is driven by karma and pain, the verse indirectly motivates taking refuge in the Lord through bhakti as a means to loosen karma’s bondage and aim for mokṣa rather than repeated embodiment.
The verse references vāyu (prāṇa-vāyu), aligning with traditional Vedic/Āyurvedic and yogic physiology rather than a specific Vedāṅga; the practical takeaway is awareness of embodiment’s frailty, supporting disciplines like yoga and vrata as aids toward self-control and liberation.