Haristuti-saṅgraha: Devatā–Ṛṣi Praṇāma, Nāma-māhātmya, and Vairāgya from Deha-āsakti
मरीचिरुवाच / देवेन चाहं हतधीर्भवनप्रसङ्गात्सर्वाशुभोपगमनाद्विमुखेद्रियश्च / कुर्वे च नित्यं सुखलेशलवादिना त्वद्दरं मनस्त्वशुभकर्म समाचरीष्ये
marīciruvāca / devena cāhaṃ hatadhīrbhavanaprasaṅgātsarvāśubhopagamanādvimukhedriyaśca / kurve ca nityaṃ sukhaleśalavādinā tvaddaraṃ manastvaśubhakarma samācarīṣye
摩利支说道:“由于神力的影响,我的辨慧被击倒;因与世间生活相系,我趋向一切不祥,我的诸根也背离正道。然而,被些微乐味所欺,我日日将心系于你所赐的‘恩惠’,于是便继续造作不善之业。”
Marichi (Maharshi)
Concept: Moha born of worldly association turns senses away; chasing tiny pleasures leads the mind into patterns that generate aśubha-karma.
Vedantic Theme: Avidyā/moha as the root of bondage; indriya-nigraha and viveka as prerequisites for liberation; recognition of samsaric bait (sukha-leśa) as a turning point.
Application: Perform daily self-examination: identify ‘tiny pleasure’ triggers, reduce harmful associations, practice sense-restraint, and replace compulsive reward-seeking with sattvic routines and remembrance of the Lord.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: moral causality (karma) and warnings against sense-indulgence recur across dharma/moksha-oriented passages
This verse frames sense-pleasure as a powerful trigger for aśubha karma: when the indriyas turn away from dharma, even “tiny” pleasures can repeatedly push the mind into harmful actions, shaping future suffering through karma.
By admitting that delusion and attachment lead to unwholesome deeds, the verse points to the karmic mechanism central to the Garuda Purana: actions rooted in desire and ignorance become causes for post-death consequences and difficult afterlife experiences.
Treat small indulgences as serious mind-habits: reduce harmful sense triggers, build daily disciplines (japa, satya, dana, restraint), and pause before acting when pleasure is the main motive—so karma remains aligned with dharma.