The Fall of Purañjana and the Supersoul as the Eternal Friend
Purañjana-Upākhyāna Culmination
प्रबोधयति माविज्ञं व्युषिते शोककर्शिता । वर्त्मैतद् गृहमेधीयं वीरसूरपि नेष्यति ॥ २० ॥
prabodhayati māvijñaṁ vyuṣite śoka-karśitā vartmaitad gṛha-medhīyaṁ vīra-sūr api neṣyati
プランジャナ王はさらに思った。「私が迷っていたとき、妻は善き助言で私を目覚めさせた。私が家を離れると、彼女は悲しみにやつれてしまった。多くの勇士の子を産んだ母であっても、家の務めという重荷を彼女が果たせるのか、私はなお恐れている。」
At the time of death King Purañjana was thinking of his wife, and this is called polluted consciousness. As Lord Kṛṣṇa explains in Bhagavad-gītā (15.7) :
This verse says that the gṛhamedhī path binds one through attachment and lamentation—so powerful that even a heroic person becomes carried away by it.
In the Purañjana allegory, her attempt to awaken him depicts the conditioned soul’s blindness at death—clinging to the body and relationships even when life has already departed.
Cultivate remembrance of the soul and devotion to Bhagavān alongside duties, so that relationships and responsibilities do not become sources of bondage and overwhelming grief.