Jabali Bound by the Monkey — Jabali Bound by the Monkey: Nandayanti’s Ordeal and the Yamuna–Hiranyavati Sacred Corridor
दशवर्षशतान्येव कौमारे कायपीडनम् यौवने पारमान् भोगान् द्विसहस्रसमास्तथा
daśavarṣaśatānyeva kaumāre kāyapīḍanam yauvane pāramān bhogān dvisahasrasamāstathā
[父亲说道:]“在童年之期,你将有一千年承受身躯的折磨;而在青年之时,你将享受至上的乐受两千年。”
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Purāṇic narration often uses hyperbolic or non-ordinary time-scales to mark extraordinary destinies, semi-divine lifespans, or to emphasize the moral structure of experience (duḥkha/bhoga) rather than provide a demographic norm.
The verse frames embodied life as alternating registers of duḥkha and bhoga, preparing the listener for the later teaching that neither suffering nor pleasure is final; both are conditioned and thus to be transcended through dharma and right orientation.
Yes. In the Vāmana Purāṇa’s geography cycles, personal narratives and ethical instruction frequently function as the ‘moral lens’ through which pilgrimage and sacred bathing are interpreted—tirtha acts are not merely spatial but transformative within a life-course.