The Destruction of Dakṣa’s Sacrifice
श्रुत्वा देवस्तदा ध्यानमवतीर्णामपश्यत । कृतकृत्यमथात्मानं कृत्वा देवस्तदास्थितः
śrutvā devastadā dhyānamavatīrṇāmapaśyata | kṛtakṛtyamathātmānaṃ kṛtvā devastadāsthitaḥ
Mendengar itu, sang dewa melihat Dhyāna turun menjelma. Lalu, setelah menjadikan dirinya kṛtakṛtya—tuntas kewajiban—ia tetap tinggal di sana dalam keadaan itu.
Narrator (context not explicitly specified in the provided excerpt)
Concept: When dhyāna ‘descends’ (is received and stabilized), one abides as kṛtakṛtya—content, duty-fulfilled, no longer restless for results.
Application: Treat meditation as receptivity: prepare through purity, japa, and restraint; then ‘remain there’—don’t immediately chase the next task or validation. End daily practice with a minute of silent abiding.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A cosmic expanse of deep indigo where a luminous personified Dhyāna descends like a soft column of light. The deity sits unmoving in lotus posture, eyes half-closed, as the universe’s first vibrations quiet into serene completion; subtle lotus motifs ripple outward from the navel-space, hinting at Padma Purāṇa’s lotus cosmology.","primary_figures":["A serene deity (Vishnu-like yogic form)","Personified Dhyāna (radiant feminine presence)"],"setting":"Primordial cosmic ocean/void with a faint lotus-throne suggestion; minimal, contemplative space","lighting_mood":"divine radiance","color_palette":["deep indigo","lotus pink","soft pearl white","gold leaf","sapphire blue"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: a seated Vishnu-like yogi on a stylized lotus pedestal, personified Dhyāna descending as a haloed feminine figure made of light; heavy gold leaf on crowns and aureoles, rich vermilion and emerald borders, gem-studded ornaments, sacred lotus motifs radiating from the center, South Indian iconographic symmetry, serene facial expressions and large almond eyes.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: a tranquil cosmic scene with delicate brushwork—an ascetic deity seated on a pale lotus, Dhyāna as a translucent maiden of light descending; cool blues and mauves, fine linework on garments, subtle star-speckled sky, lyrical minimalism, refined faces, gentle gradients suggesting silence.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold black outlines and natural pigments—central yogic deity with broad chest and stylized eyes, Dhyāna as a glowing feminine form above; warm yellow and red background aura, green accents on lotus leaves, temple-wall aesthetic, ornamental borders with lotus and conch motifs.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: lotus-filled cosmic pond with a central divine yogi, Dhyāna descending amid swirling floral borders; intricate lotus vines, peacocks at the margins, deep blue ground with gold highlights, Nathdwara-like decorative density while keeping the central stillness dominant."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"meditative","suggested_raga":"Yaman","pace":"slow-meditative","voice_tone":"serene","sound_elements":["silence","soft tanpura drone","distant temple bell","gentle conch fade-in"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: देवस्तदा = देवः + तदा; ध्यानमवतीर्णाम् = ध्यानम् + अवतीर्णाम्; अवतीर्णामपश्यत = अवतीर्णाम् + अपश्यत्; कृतकृत्यमथ = कृतकृत्यम् + अथ; अथात्मानम् = अथ + आत्मानम्; देवस्तदास्थितः = देवः + तदा + अस्थितः (तदा + अस्थितः → तदास्थितः).
It presents meditation as a tangible, grace-like presence—an attained state that “comes down” or manifests, rather than merely a mental effort.
kṛtakṛtya implies completion of one’s necessary duty and inner aim; the verse frames spiritual fulfillment as a settled, accomplished condition rather than ongoing striving.
The verse is more explicitly Yogic, highlighting Dhyāna and steadiness (sthitaḥ), though the notion of Dhyāna “descending” can also be read as grace compatible with devotional frameworks.