Vow-Fasting (Anaśana), Sannyāsa, Tīrtha-Death, and the Ethics of Dāna
समाः सहस्राणि च सप्त वै जले दशैकमग्नौ पवने च षोडश / महाहवे पष्टिरशीतिर्गोगृहे अनाशके काश्यप चाक्षया गतिः
samāḥ sahasrāṇi ca sapta vai jale daśaikamagnau pavane ca ṣoḍaśa / mahāhave paṣṭiraśītirgogṛhe anāśake kāśyapa cākṣayā gatiḥ
జలంలో ఏడు వేల సంవత్సరాలు, అగ్నిలో పదకొండు వేల, వాయువులో పదహారు వేల (కాలం) అని చెప్పబడింది. మహాయుద్ధంలో అక్షయగతి లభిస్తుంది; గోశాలలో కూడా అలాగే, ఉపవాసంలోనూ—ఓ కాశ్యపా—అక్షయ ప్రగతి కలుగుతుంది।
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue, instructing Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Afterlife Stage: Svarga
Concept: Specific modes of death/austerity and contexts yield distinct durations and an ‘imperishable course’ for the departed.
Vedantic Theme: Karma-phala-niyati: results correspond to conditions and intention; tapas as purifier affecting gati.
Application: Value disciplined austerity and self-sacrifice; interpret ‘akṣaya-gati’ as encouragement toward dharmic endurance rather than reckless self-harm.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Type: cosmic/elemental zones and human settings
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: discussions of gati (destiny) and special deaths/austerities yielding higher lokas (general internal parallel)
This verse uses akṣaya gati to mark outcomes considered spiritually enduring—contrasted with long but finite stays linked to elemental conditions (water, fire, wind).
It describes specific time-spans associated with post-mortem experiences connected to elements (water, fire, wind) and then highlights certain conditions (great battle, cow-shed, fasting) as leading to an “imperishable” onward course.
It encourages disciplined, dharmic living—especially restraint (fasting as self-control) and service to sacred duties—while reminding that actions and circumstances at death are taught to influence one’s post-death trajectory.