Prāyaścitta: Catalogue of Sins, Narakas, and Graded Expiations
Kṛcchra–Cāndrāyaṇa–Japa
वृक्षगुल्मलतावीरुच्छेदने जप्यमृक्शतम् / अवकीर्णो भवेद्गत्त्वा ब्रह्मचारी च योषितम्
vṛkṣagulmalatāvīrucchedane japyamṛkśatam / avakīrṇo bhavedgattvā brahmacārī ca yoṣitam
వృక్షాలు, పొదలు, లతలు లేదా వల్లి కోయినప్పుడు ఋగ్వేదంలోని వంద ఋక్మంత్రాలను జపించాలి. బ్రహ్మచారి స్త్రీని ఆశ్రయించి వెళ్లినచో అతడు బ్రహ్మచర్య నియమం నుండి పడిపోయిన ‘అవకీర్ణుడు’ అవుతాడు.
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Harm to living growth and breach of continence require expiation; brahmacarya is a protected vow with defined fall-status (avakīrṇa).
Vedantic Theme: Karma (adharma) binds; purification through mantra and restraint restores adhikāra for dharma and study.
Application: Avoid needless cutting of plants; if unavoidable, perform prescribed mantra-japa; maintain sexual discipline in student life and seek formal expiation if violated.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.105 (prāyaścitta-adhyāya context: expiations for specific acts)
This verse shows that specific wrong actions—such as harming vegetation or violating brahmacarya—have prescribed remedial disciplines, often involving Vedic mantra-recitation, to restore dharmic purity.
By classifying actions as faults requiring expiation, it implies that unresolved transgressions burden the jīva with demerit (pāpa) that affects post-death consequences; prāyaścitta is presented as a corrective to that karmic burden.
Avoid needless harm to plants and ecosystems, and uphold the ethical discipline appropriate to one’s life-stage; where harm occurs, adopt sincere corrective practices (repentance, restraint, and sacred recitation).