The Preta’s Staged Journey to Yama’s City: Monthly Śrāddha Supports, Vaitaraṇī Crossing, and the Witnesses of Deeds
दैवं हि पूर्वसुकृतं तन्मया नैव सञ्चितम् / एवं सञ्चिन्त्य बहुशो धैर्यमालम्बते पुनः
daivaṃ hi pūrvasukṛtaṃ tanmayā naiva sañcitam / evaṃ sañcintya bahuśo dhairyamālambate punaḥ
Takdir (daiva) sesungguhnya ialah buah pahala kebajikan dari kelahiran-kelahiran terdahulu; namun pahala itu tidak pernah aku himpun. Dengan merenung demikian berulang-ulang, seseorang kembali berpaut pada keteguhan hati, memegang keberanian, lalu memperoleh ketenteraman semula.
Lord Vishnu (narrating to Garuda in the Preta Kanda context)
Concept: Daiva as the maturation of prior-life merit; repeated reflection stabilizes the mind and restores courage.
Vedantic Theme: Karma-phala and the cultivation of titikṣā/śama as inner discipline amid prārabdha-like outcomes.
Application: When facing fortune/misfortune, reinterpret it as karmic fruition; practice repeated contemplation (manana) to regain steadiness instead of blaming others or collapsing into fatalism.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Related Themes: Garuda Purana Pretakalpa: karma-phala accounting and the inevitability of deed-fruit (nearby 2.16.49–50)
In this verse, daiva refers to the apparent force of destiny—understood as the ripened result of past merit (pūrva-sukṛta) rather than random chance.
It states that what is experienced as fate is rooted in earlier-life good deeds; reflecting on this karmic causality helps a person regain dhairya (steadiness) instead of collapsing into panic.
When facing hardship, repeatedly reflect that outcomes arise from causes (karma) and cultivate dhairya—respond with disciplined action, prayer, and ethical living rather than despair.