The Prayers of the Personified Vedas (Śruti-stuti) and the Indescribable Absolute
त्वं चैतद् ब्रह्मदायाद श्रद्धयात्मानुशासनम् । धारयंश्चर गां कामं कामानां भर्जनं नृणाम् ॥ ४४ ॥
tvaṁ caitad brahma-dāyāda śraddhayātmānuśāsanam dhārayaṁś cara gāṁ kāmaṁ kāmānāṁ bharjanaṁ nṛṇām
ထို့ပြင် ဘြဟ္မာ၏ သားတော်ရေ၊ သင်သည် မြေပြင်ပေါ်တွင် စိတ်ကြိုက် လှည့်လည်သွားလာစဉ် အတ္တမဗိဇ္ဇာ (ကိုယ်တော်သိပ္ပံ) ဆိုင်ရာ ဤအမိန့်တော်ကို ယုံကြည် श्रद्धာဖြင့် စိတ်ထဲတွင် ထိန်းထားပါ; လူသားတို့၏ မာယာဆန္ဒအားလုံးကို မီးလောင်ပျက်စီးစေသည်။
Nārada, the son of Brahmā, heard this account from Śrī Nārāyaṇa Ṛṣi. The epithet brahma-dāyāda also means that Nārada attained Brahman effortlessly, just as if it were his inherited birthright.
This verse urges faithful adherence to self-discipline and specifically calls for restraining the restless force of kāma, describing it as a burning power that ruins a person’s higher aims.
In the Śruti-gītā section, the personified Vedas (Śrutayaḥ) offer teachings and prayers to the Supreme Lord; the narration is presented within Śukadeva Gosvāmī’s discourse.
Practice daily self-regulation—limit sense triggers, keep disciplined habits, and anchor the mind in spiritual study and devotion—so desire does not roam unchecked and undermine your values.