Bhadrā and Mitravindā: The Fruits of Namaskāra, Pradakṣiṇā, Hari-nāma, and Śravaṇa of Bhāgavata Kathā
देहं तु ये पोषयन्त्येव तात हरेः प्रणामैः शून्यभूतं च पुष्टम् / तदेवमाहुर्व्यर्थमेवेति तात तत्पोषकाणां नरके दुः खमाहुः
dehaṃ tu ye poṣayantyeva tāta hareḥ praṇāmaiḥ śūnyabhūtaṃ ca puṣṭam / tadevamāhurvyarthameveti tāta tatpoṣakāṇāṃ narake duḥ khamāhuḥ
"ချစ်လှစွာသောသူ၊ ဟရိ (ဗိဿနိုး) အား ရှိခိုးခြင်း ကင်းမဲ့လျက် ခန္ဓာကိုယ်ကိုသာ အာဟာရဖြည့်တင်းသူများသည် အချည်းနှီး အသက်ရှင်သည်ဟု ဆိုကြ၏။ ထိုသို့သော ဘဝကို ထိန်းသိမ်းသူများအတွက် ငရဲ၌ ဆင်းရဲဒုက္ခ ခံစားရမည်ဟု ဟောကြားထားသည်။"
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Afterlife Stage: Naraka
Concept: A life spent merely nourishing the body, without prostration to Hari, is declared futile; such attachment leads to suffering in hell.
Vedantic Theme: Deha-abhimāna (body-identification) as bondage; bhakti as the reorientation that gives life meaning and protects from downward karmic trajectories.
Application: Reduce obsessive body-only priorities; integrate daily devotion (pranāma, nāma) and ethical living so that livelihood and self-care serve dharma rather than replace it.
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Type: realm
Related Themes: Garuda Purana Preta-kalpa: frequent warnings that neglect of dharma/bhakti yields naraka experiences; Garuda Purana: contrasts between deha-āsakti and Hari-smaraṇa at death
This verse states that nourishing the body without offering reverent salutations to Hari is considered a futile life, leading to suffering in naraka—thereby placing bhakti as a central safeguard against adverse afterlife consequences.
By warning that a life spent only maintaining the physical body (seen as ultimately ‘empty’) results in naraka-suffering, the verse implies that spiritual orientation—especially devotion to Vishnu—shapes the soul’s post-death trajectory.
Balance bodily care with daily spiritual practice—such as prayer, namaskara, remembrance of Vishnu, and ethical living—so life is not reduced to mere physical maintenance.