Āyuḥ-kṣaya by Vikarma; Impermanence of the Body; Aśauca and Child Śrāddha Procedures; Dāna as Remedy
तपोरतो योगशीलो महाज्ञानी च यो नरः / महादानरतः श्रीमान्धर्मात्मातुलविक्रमः / विना मानुपदेहं तु सुखं दुः खं न विन्दति
taporato yogaśīlo mahājñānī ca yo naraḥ / mahādānarataḥ śrīmāndharmātmātulavikramaḥ / vinā mānupadehaṃ tu sukhaṃ duḥ khaṃ na vindati
തപസ്സിൽ രതനായും യോഗശീലനായും മഹാജ്ഞാനിയായും മഹാദാനത്തിൽ തൽപരനായും ശ്രീമാനായും ധർമാത്മാവായും അതുലവിക്രമനായും ഉള്ള മനുഷ്യൻ പോലും—മാനവദേഹം ഇല്ലാതെ സുഖവും ദുഃഖവും അനുഭവിക്കുകയില്ല।
Lord Vishnu (narrating to Garuda)
Concept: Bhoga (experience of pleasure/pain) requires a human body; even great tapas, yoga, jñāna, dāna, and dharma do not yield experiential fruition without embodiment.
Vedantic Theme: Deha-upādhi as the instrument for prārabdha-bhoga; distinction between ātman and body while acknowledging body as the locus of vyavahāra and karma-phala experience.
Application: Value human birth: use embodied life for dharma, sādhana, and responsible action; avoid postponing spiritual practice under the assumption that merit alone suffices without lived discipline.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Related Themes: Garuda Purana Pretakalpa discussions on necessity of embodiment for karma-phala and the soul’s journey (general thematic parallel)
This verse states that the experience of sukha (pleasure) and duḥkha (pain)—the field where karma is tasted and worked out—depends upon having a mānuṣa-deha (human body), even for highly virtuous and learned persons.
By implying that post-death states are not the same as embodied human experience: without the human body, the usual modes of experiencing pleasure and pain change, highlighting why human life is pivotal for dharma, yoga, and conscious karma-shaping.
Treat human life as a rare opportunity: practice dharma, self-discipline (yoga), and charity now, because the fullest arena for conscious ethical choice and karmic experience is the embodied human condition.