Fruits of Occasional (Festival-Specific) Charity — The Vena Episode
संकल्पयंति दानानि मोक्षं वै चिंतयंति च । तस्मिन्मृते महाराज मायामोहे गते सति
saṃkalpayaṃti dānāni mokṣaṃ vai ciṃtayaṃti ca | tasminmṛte mahārāja māyāmohe gate sati
Mereka bertekad melakukan dana (amal sedekah) dan juga merenungkan mokṣa. Namun ketika ia (orang itu) telah wafat, wahai maharaja, dan delusi Māyā menimpa mereka,
Uncertain from single-verse context (likely a narrator addressing a king: 'mahārāja')
Concept: People often vow charity and even think of liberation only after a death; but māyā-moha quickly returns—so dharma must be practiced steadily, not merely in moments of shock.
Application: Convert grief-driven vows into routines: weekly dana, regular temple/puja, Ekadashi discipline, and daily remembrance; write commitments and keep them beyond the mourning period.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"After the cremation, a group sits in quiet counsel: one elder points toward a small Vishnu shrine while others, still tearful, make solemn saṅkalpa gestures over a copper pot and a donation ledger. The scene captures the fragile moment when grief can become genuine transformation—or fade back into māyā’s forgetfulness.","primary_figures":["mourning relatives","an elder counselor","a small Vishnu shrine presence"],"setting":"Riverside or cremation-ground edge with a temporary pavilion; ritual items—copper pot, kusa grass, cloth bundles for charity.","lighting_mood":"golden dawn","color_palette":["soft gold","river blue","white ash","copper","tulasi green"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: dawn after rites, relatives making saṅkalpa for dāna before a Vishnu shrine; gold leaf on the deity halo and ritual vessels, rich reds/greens, ornate borders, devotional gravity turning into resolve.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: delicate dawn riverside scene with figures seated in counsel, subtle tears and calm faces; cool blues and soft gold sky, refined linework, a small shrine glowing gently to suggest mokṣa-thought arising.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines, ritual pavilion with copper vessels and kusa, figures in saṅkalpa mudra; strong pigments with a prominent Vishnu emblem, narrative clarity emphasizing resolve after death’s lesson.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: symbolic dawn composition with lotus borders; central Vishnu motif blessing vows of dāna and mokṣa, deep blue-to-gold gradient background, intricate floral patterns and auspicious detailing."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"meditative","suggested_raga":"Yaman","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"reverent-soft","sound_elements":["flowing water","soft morning birds","single temple bell","quiet chanting"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: तस्मिन्मृते = तस्मिन् + मृते (अनुस्वार/नासिक्य-सन्धि); मायामोहे treated as षष्ठी-तत्पुरुष; ‘गते सति’ forms सति-सप्तमी construction.
It contrasts sincere intentions—charity and contemplation of liberation—with how quickly people can fall back into māyā-born delusion after a key death, implying the need for steady, lived practice rather than momentary resolve.
It pairs outer ethical action (dāna) with inner spiritual aim (mokṣa), presenting a holistic dharmic life where generosity supports purification and readiness for liberation.
That grief, attachment, and worldly distraction can derail spiritual commitments; therefore one should cultivate consistency, remembrance, and discernment so vows do not depend on circumstances.