Ahiṃsā as Threefold Restraint (Mind–Speech–Action) and the Ethics of Consumption
कच्छपो दश वर्षाणि त्रीणि वर्षाणि शल्यक: । व्यालो भूत्वा च षण्मासांस्ततो जायति मानुष:
Yudhiṣṭhira uvāca:
Kacchapo daśa varṣāṇi trīṇi varṣāṇi śalyakaḥ |
Vyālo bhūtvā ca ṣaṇmāsāṁs tato jāyati mānuṣaḥ ||
دس برس کچھوا، تین برس ساہی (کانٹेदार جانور)، اور چھ ماہ سانپ بن کر رہتا ہے؛ اس کے بعد وہ پھر انسانی رحم میں جنم لیتا ہے۔
युधिछिर उवाच
The verse underscores karmic consequence and the graded movement through non-human forms before returning to human birth, implying that actions can lead to constrained existences and that human birth is regained after undergoing specific results.
Yudhiṣṭhira states a sequence of rebirth durations—tortoise for ten years, porcupine for three, serpent for six months—after which the being is born as a human again, as part of a discussion on the fruits of conduct and the workings of dharma.