The Extent of Questions: Deathbed Rites, Kāla (Time), and Karma-Vipāka Rebirths
यस्य कालेन नो यायाद्वियोगः प्राणदेहयोः / प्राणिनश्च स्वसमये मृत्युरत्यन्तविस्मृतिः
yasya kālena no yāyādviyogaḥ prāṇadehayoḥ / prāṇinaśca svasamaye mṛtyuratyantavismṛtiḥ
کس کے لیے مقررہ وقت پر جان اور بدن کی جدائی نہیں ہوتی؟ ہر جاندار کی موت اپنے ہی وقت پر آتی ہے، اور اسی لمحے شدید حیرت و غفلت اور کامل فراموشی چھا جاتی ہے۔
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Afterlife Stage: Yamaloka Journey
Concept: Death is inevitable at its appointed time; at death there is moha (bewilderment) and vismṛti (forgetfulness).
Vedantic Theme: Anityatā (impermanence) of the body; prāṇa-deha viyoga as a marker of saṃsāra; moha as avidyā’s symptom at the threshold of death.
Application: Cultivate daily remembrance of mortality and steadying practices (japa, dhyāna, sat-saṅga) so the mind is trained before the death-moment confusion.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Related Themes: Garuda Purana Pretakalpa: themes of prāṇa-deha separation and moha at death recur in descriptions of the preta’s disorientation and Yama’s path (general parallel).
This verse states that separation of prāṇa and body happens by Kala at the destined moment for every being, emphasizing death as inevitable and time-governed rather than accidental.
It highlights that death is accompanied by atyanta-vismṛti—intense confusion/forgetfulness—indicating why guidance, remembrance, and dharmic preparation are stressed in the Preta Kanda context.
Live with awareness of impermanence: practice remembrance of dharma and devotion, reduce attachment, and prepare responsibly for end-of-life duties (ethical living and appropriate rites) since death arrives at its own appointed time.