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
Walaupun seseorang tekun bertapa, berdisiplin dalam yoga, sangat berilmu, gemar bersedekah besar, makmur, berjiwa dharma dan berani tiada bandingan—tanpa jasad manusia, dia tidak mengalami sama ada suka mahupun duka.
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.