Saṃsāra-duḥkha: Karmic Descent, Garbhavāsa, Life’s Anxieties, Death, and the Call to Jñāna-Bhakti
स्थावरत्वे पृथिव्यामुत्पबीजानि जलसेकानुपदं सुसंस्कारसामग्रीवशादंतरुष्मप्रपाचितान्युच्छूनत्वमापद्य ततो मूलभावं तन्मूलादंकुरोत्पत्तिस्तस्मादपि पर्णकांडनालादिकं कांडेषु च प्रसवमापद्यंते तेषु च पुष्पसंभवः ॥ २ ॥
sthāvaratve pṛthivyāmutpabījāni jalasekānupadaṃ susaṃskārasāmagrīvaśādaṃtaruṣmaprapācitānyucchūnatvamāpadya tato mūlabhāvaṃ tanmūlādaṃkurotpattistasmādapi parṇakāṃḍanālādikaṃ kāṃḍeṣu ca prasavamāpadyaṃte teṣu ca puṣpasaṃbhavaḥ || 2 ||
種子が地中にあり、たびたび水を注がれると、正しい整えと好条件の力によって、内なる熱に温められ膨らむ。そこから根の形となり、根より芽が生じ、芽から葉・茎・幹が現れ、幹はさらに成長して、ついに花が生まれる。
Narada (teaching in a doctrinal/explanatory passage within the Purva Bhaga)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: adbhuta (wonder)
Secondary Rasa: shanta (peace)
It highlights a step-by-step doctrine of causality: with the right conditions and inner transformative power, latent potential (a seed) unfolds into visible fruition (flowers), mirroring how disciplined practice and proper samskara mature into spiritual results.
Though describing botany, it functions as an analogy: consistent “watering” (regular worship, japa, kirtana) and proper “preparation” (right conduct and purity) awaken inner spiritual heat (tapas/earnestness), leading gradually from roots (faith) to blossoms (love and realization).
It reflects a Vedic-science style of observation and ordered process (cause → condition → transformation). While not a direct Vedanga lesson, it resonates with systematic reasoning used in disciplines like Vyakarana and Kalpa: results arise when prerequisites and procedures are correctly applied.