The Origin of the Gaṅgā and the Gods’ Defeat Caused by Bali
मात्रा हीना जना मातर्मृतप्राया न संशयः । गावो वा पशवो वापि यत्र गावो महीरुहाः ॥ ४३ ॥
mātrā hīnā janā mātarmṛtaprāyā na saṃśayaḥ | gāvo vā paśavo vāpi yatra gāvo mahīruhāḥ || 43 ||
Ôi Mẫu thân, kẻ thiếu chừng mực và cân bằng thì chẳng khác nào đã chết—không nghi ngờ gì. Dù là bò hay các loài gia súc khác, nơi nào bò bị đối xử như thú kéo nặng, như cây cắm rễ vào đất, thì sinh khí nơi ấy trở nên trì trệ và suy đồi.
Narada (in dialogue context with the Sanatkumara tradition; vocative 'mātar' indicates an addressed Mother-figure within the discourse)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta (peace)
Secondary Rasa: raudra (anger)
It teaches that life becomes spiritually inert when people lose “mātrā”—right measure, restraint, and dharmic proportion—resulting in a condition described as ‘almost dead’ even while living.
Bhakti is sustained by dharmic order and compassion; protecting and honoring life—especially through go-sevā—supports sattva and makes the heart fit for remembrance and worship of the Divine.
The key practical principle is “mātrā” (measure/proportion), a foundational idea aligned with Śikṣā (correct regulation/discipline) and ritual propriety—without proper measure, practice becomes fruitless and life declines.