Hari-stuti by Śrī, Brahmā, Vāyu, Sarasvatī, Śeṣa, Garuḍa, Rudra, Vāruṇī and Pārvatī
Humility, Surrender, and the Power of the Name
न देहि त्वं सर्वदा मे मुरारे अहंममत्वं प्राप्यमेतावदेव / गम्यज्ञानं योग्यगुणे रमेश प्रमादो वा नास्तिनास्त्यद्य नित्य
na dehi tvaṃ sarvadā me murāre ahaṃmamatvaṃ prāpyametāvadeva / gamyajñānaṃ yogyaguṇe rameśa pramādo vā nāstināstyadya nitya
ムラーリよ、どうか決して「我」と「我がもの」という我執を私に与えないでください。これのみを私の得とならしめてください。ラーマー(ラクシュミー)の主よ、ふさわしき徳を具えるお方よ、知り得て実現し得る智慧を授け、怠りが起こらぬようにしてください——今日も、そして永遠にも。
Garuda (Vinata-putra) addressing Lord Vishnu
Concept: Prayer for eradication of ahamkāra and mamatā, and for ‘gamya-jñāna’—knowledge that is attainable/realizable—leading to apramāda (non-negligence).
Vedantic Theme: Ahaṃkāra-mamatā as avidyā-bandha; apramāda as the guardian of liberation (Upaniṣadic emphasis); grace-assisted viveka.
Application: Daily self-audit: notice ‘I/me/mine’ reactions; replace with offering attitude; maintain apramāda via regular japa, study, and mindful restraint of distractions.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: bhakti allied with jñāna and the repeated warning against pramāda in sādhana
This verse treats freedom from ‘I’ and ‘mine’ as the core attainment, implying that ego and possessiveness are primary obstacles to stable wisdom and liberation.
By emphasizing realizable knowledge and vigilance (freedom from pramāda), it points to inner purification as the safeguard that supports the soul’s progress beyond bondage created by attachment and self-centered identity.
Practice daily self-audit to reduce possessiveness, cultivate worthy qualities (discipline, humility), and avoid negligence in dharma and sadhana so wisdom becomes lived rather than merely heard.