Brahmā’s Curse, Four Births, and the Dharma of Shared Embodiment
Draupadī/Kṛṣṇā
सुराणां सुरभोग्याश्च भोगं जानन्ति देवताः / न जानन्त्येव मर्त्यांस्तु तेषु देहेषु ते पुनः
surāṇāṃ surabhogyāśca bhogaṃ jānanti devatāḥ / na jānantyeva martyāṃstu teṣu deheṣu te punaḥ
દેવતાઓ દેવયોગ્ય ભોગોને જાણે છે; પરંતુ મર્ત્યોને—જે ફરી તે મર્ત્ય દેહોમાં સ્થિત હોય—તેમને તેઓ ખરેખર ઓળખતા નથી.
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue with Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Embodiment conditions knowledge and recognition; deva-experience is not a reliable measure for understanding mortal embodied life.
Vedantic Theme: Deha-upādhi (limiting adjunct of body) shaping cognition; relativity of experience across lokas.
Application: Do not universalize one’s own experiential frame; cultivate humility and discernment about what one can truly know of others’ conditions.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.17.48 (haṁsa-like discernment as the remedy)
This verse highlights that devas are attuned to divine modes of enjoyment, while the mortal condition—being bound to a specific body—limits recognition and experience, emphasizing the role of embodiment in post-death understanding.
By stressing “again in those bodies,” it points to repeated embodiment and the distinction between divine and mortal states, aligning with the Garuda Purana’s broader theme that the soul’s experiences are shaped by its embodied condition and karma.
Cultivate dharma and spiritual discipline rather than chasing sense-pleasures; the verse encourages valuing inner clarity over bodily identity, since embodiment conditions perception and recognition.