Post-cremation Ripening of Karma and the Principal Narakas
भ्राम्यन्ते मानवा रक्तमुद्गिरन्तः पुनः पुनः / अन्त्रैर्मुखविनिष्क्रान्तैर्नेत्रैरन्त्रावलम्बिभैः
bhrāmyante mānavā raktamudgirantaḥ punaḥ punaḥ / antrairmukhaviniṣkrāntairnetrairantrāvalambibhaiḥ
മനുഷ്യർ വീണ്ടും വീണ്ടും രക്തം ഛർദ്ദിച്ചുകൊണ്ട് അലഞ്ഞുതിരിയുന്നു; അവരുടെ ആന്ത്രങ്ങൾ വായിലൂടെ പുറത്തേക്ക് വലിക്കപ്പെടുന്നു, അതേ ആന്ത്രങ്ങളിൽ അവരുടെ കണ്ണുകൾ തൂങ്ങിക്കിടക്കുന്നു।
Lord Vishnu (narrating to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Afterlife Stage: Naraka
Concept: Embodied suffering mirrors the violence/impurity of prior actions; the body becomes the field where pāpa ripens.
Vedantic Theme: Dehābhimāna (body-identification) as a locus of suffering; saṃsāra’s painful embodiment when driven by adharma.
Application: Cultivate ahiṃsā and purity; reduce cruelty and exploitation that ‘returns’ as bodily torment in karmic imagination.
Primary Rasa: bibhatsa
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Type: infernal torture-ground where bodies are mangled
Related Themes: Garuda Purana Pretakalpa: repeated motifs of organs/eyes displaced in naraka descriptions; Transition to Asipatravana in 2.3.31 as the next naraka
They function as moral instruction: vivid consequences illustrate how harmful karma ripens into suffering, urging restraint, repentance, and dharmic living.
In the Preta Kanda narrative, the departed who carry heavy sinful karma can experience hellish states; this verse depicts a specific torment as part of that post-death consequence.
Use it as a reminder to avoid cruelty and wrongdoing, practice self-control, and adopt dharmic habits (truthfulness, non-harm, charity), while performing sincere atonement when one errs.