Brahmā’s Curse, Four Births, and the Dharma of Shared Embodiment
Draupadī/Kṛṣṇā
त्रिवारानन्तरं ब्रह्मा शप्तवांस्ता महाप्रभुः / त्रिवारं वञ्चनं यस्मादेकवारं च दर्शनम्
trivārānantaraṃ brahmā śaptavāṃstā mahāprabhuḥ / trivāraṃ vañcanaṃ yasmādekavāraṃ ca darśanam
ထို့နောက် မဟာသခင် ဘြဟ္မာသည် သူတို့ကို ဆက်တိုက် သုံးကြိမ် ကျိန်စာချ၏—“လှည့်ဖြားမှု သုံးကြိမ်ရှိသဖြင့် သန့်ရှင်းသော ဒർശန (darśana) အမှန်တကယ်ကို တစ်ကြိမ်သာ ရရှိစေမည်” ဟု။
Lord Vishnu (narrating to Garuda)
Concept: Repeated deceit yields proportionate restriction of grace/encounter; actions pattern future access and outcomes.
Vedantic Theme: Karma-niyati: moral causality governs experience; adharma contracts auspicious contact (darśana).
Application: Recognize that repeated unethical choices create long-term constraints; cultivate integrity to preserve trust and ‘darśana’ (access, opportunity, blessing).
Primary Rasa: raudra
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.17.9 (threefold deception); Garuda Purana 3.17.11-13 (rebirth-fruits of the curse)
This verse links repeated deceit (vañcana) with a restrictive karmic outcome, showing that dishonesty reduces one’s access to auspicious grace and rightful recognition (darśana).
By framing the result as Brahmā’s threefold curse, the text presents karma as a moral law: the frequency of wrongdoing (three deceptions) shapes the limitation of the reward (a single darśana).
Practice truthfulness in speech and conduct; repeated small acts of cheating accumulate consequences, while integrity preserves trust, merit, and spiritual clarity.