Trikūṭa Mountain, Ṛtumat Garden, and the Beginning of Gajendra’s Crisis
स पुष्करेणोद्धृतशीकराम्बुभि- र्निपाययन्संस्नपयन्यथा गृही । घृणी करेणु: करभांश्च दुर्मदो नाचष्ट कृच्छ्रं कृपणोऽजमायया ॥ २६ ॥
sa puṣkareṇoddhṛta-śīkarāmbubhir nipāyayan saṁsnapayan yathā gṛhī ghṛṇī kareṇuḥ karabhāṁś ca durmado nācaṣṭa kṛcchraṁ kṛpaṇo ’ja-māyayā
Như người thiếu tri thức tâm linh và luyến ái gia quyến, Gajendra bị ngoại năng (māyā) của Śrī Kṛṣṇa mê hoặc đã dùng vòi múc nước hồ, phun rưới và cho các voi cái cùng đàn con tắm uống; nó chẳng bận tâm đến nhọc nhằn ấy.
This verse shows that even a compassionate and capable being can fail to recognize imminent danger when covered by the Lord’s māyā; worldly strength and duty do not automatically grant spiritual clarity.
Because he lovingly cared for and served his family—giving them water and bathing them—yet remained unaware of the crisis approaching him, illustrating how attachment can coexist with ignorance of life’s deeper peril.
Do your responsibilities with compassion, but cultivate steady remembrance of God and vigilance about life’s real dangers—forgetfulness, pride, and complacency—so that duty becomes devotion rather than distraction.