Fruits of Occasional (Festival-Specific) Charity — The Vena Episode
संकल्पयंति दानानि मोक्षं वै चिंतयंति च । तस्मिन्मृते महाराज मायामोहे गते सति
saṃkalpayaṃti dānāni mokṣaṃ vai ciṃtayaṃti ca | tasminmṛte mahārāja māyāmohe gate sati
Они решаются на дары милостыни и также помышляют об освобождении (мокше). Но когда тот умирает, о великий царь, и на них нисходит наваждение Майи,
Uncertain from single-verse context (likely a narrator addressing a king: 'mahārāja')
Concept: People often vow charity and even think of liberation only after a death; but māyā-moha quickly returns—so dharma must be practiced steadily, not merely in moments of shock.
Application: Convert grief-driven vows into routines: weekly dana, regular temple/puja, Ekadashi discipline, and daily remembrance; write commitments and keep them beyond the mourning period.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"After the cremation, a group sits in quiet counsel: one elder points toward a small Vishnu shrine while others, still tearful, make solemn saṅkalpa gestures over a copper pot and a donation ledger. The scene captures the fragile moment when grief can become genuine transformation—or fade back into māyā’s forgetfulness.","primary_figures":["mourning relatives","an elder counselor","a small Vishnu shrine presence"],"setting":"Riverside or cremation-ground edge with a temporary pavilion; ritual items—copper pot, kusa grass, cloth bundles for charity.","lighting_mood":"golden dawn","color_palette":["soft gold","river blue","white ash","copper","tulasi green"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: dawn after rites, relatives making saṅkalpa for dāna before a Vishnu shrine; gold leaf on the deity halo and ritual vessels, rich reds/greens, ornate borders, devotional gravity turning into resolve.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: delicate dawn riverside scene with figures seated in counsel, subtle tears and calm faces; cool blues and soft gold sky, refined linework, a small shrine glowing gently to suggest mokṣa-thought arising.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines, ritual pavilion with copper vessels and kusa, figures in saṅkalpa mudra; strong pigments with a prominent Vishnu emblem, narrative clarity emphasizing resolve after death’s lesson.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: symbolic dawn composition with lotus borders; central Vishnu motif blessing vows of dāna and mokṣa, deep blue-to-gold gradient background, intricate floral patterns and auspicious detailing."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"meditative","suggested_raga":"Yaman","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"reverent-soft","sound_elements":["flowing water","soft morning birds","single temple bell","quiet chanting"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: तस्मिन्मृते = तस्मिन् + मृते (अनुस्वार/नासिक्य-सन्धि); मायामोहे treated as षष्ठी-तत्पुरुष; ‘गते सति’ forms सति-सप्तमी construction.
It contrasts sincere intentions—charity and contemplation of liberation—with how quickly people can fall back into māyā-born delusion after a key death, implying the need for steady, lived practice rather than momentary resolve.
It pairs outer ethical action (dāna) with inner spiritual aim (mokṣa), presenting a holistic dharmic life where generosity supports purification and readiness for liberation.
That grief, attachment, and worldly distraction can derail spiritual commitments; therefore one should cultivate consistency, remembrance, and discernment so vows do not depend on circumstances.