Dehānta (Cyavana) and Upapatti: Kāśyapa’s Questions and the Siddha’s Account of Death, Pain, and Karmic Re-embodiment
स जीव: प्रच्युत: कायात् कर्मभि: स्वै: समावृत: । अभित: स्वै: शुभै: पुण्यै: पापैर्वाप्युपपद्यते,शरीरसे अलग होनेपर वह जीव अपने किये हुए शुभकार्य पुण्य अथवा अशुभ कार्य पापकर्मोद्वारा सब ओरसे घिरा रहता है
sa jīvaḥ pracyutaḥ kāyāt karmabhiḥ svaiḥ samāvṛtaḥ | abhitaḥ svaiḥ śubhaiḥ puṇyaiḥ pāpair vāpy upapadyate ||
生きものが身体を離れるとき、なお自らの業に包まれている。四方からその行いの果が付き従う—善き行いより生じた吉祥の功徳であれ、悪しき行いより生じた罪の報いであれ—それによって、その後に至る境遇が定まるのである。
सिद्ध उवाच
The verse teaches moral causality: when the self leaves the body, it does not leave its deeds behind. One’s own actions—virtuous (puṇya) or sinful (pāpa)—surround and shape the state one attains after death.
A Siddha is instructing about the post-mortem journey of the jīva, emphasizing that the departing being is accompanied and determined by the accumulated consequences of its own karma, whether good or bad.