Budhāṣṭamī / Mahārudra Vrata: Procedure, Mantra, and the Story of Kauśika and Vijayā
गोपालकैर्वृषश्चौरैः क्रीडास्थोपहृतो बलात् / गङ्गातः स च उत्थाय वनं बभ्राम दुः खितः
gopālakairvṛṣaścauraiḥ krīḍāsthopahṛto balāt / gaṅgātaḥ sa ca utthāya vanaṃ babhrāma duḥ khitaḥ
当他嬉戏之时,那公牛被一群牧牛人——实为盗牛之徒——强行掳走。随后他自恒河起身,忧苦不已,徘徊走入林野。
Lord Vishnu (narrating to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Adharma (theft/violence) causes immediate suffering; distress becomes a catalyst for seeking righteous remedy.
Vedantic Theme: Karma as moral causality in lived experience; duḥkha prompting discernment (viveka).
Application: Guard dependents and property without cruelty; respond to wrongdoing through lawful, non-vengeful means; cultivate resilience when loss occurs.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Type: riverbank/forest
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.132.11ff (likely leads to resolution via vrata/kathā fruit)
It illustrates how distress and displacement can arise through force and wrongdoing in society, reinforcing the Purana’s moral framing of suffering and conduct.
Indirectly: it sets a narrative tone where lived experiences—fear, loss, and sorrow—are presented as consequences within a larger karmic and dharmic order discussed in the Preta Kanda.
Avoid causing harm or coercion for gain, protect the vulnerable, and treat others’ livelihood and animals ethically—actions aligned with dharma that reduce future suffering.