viᚣayÄbhiniveĹena
nÄtmÄnaáš yat smaret punaḼ
jantor vai kasyacid dhetor
máštyur atyanta-vismáštiḼ
viᚣaya - in (new) objects of perception; abhiniveĹena - because of absorption; na - not; ÄtmÄnam - his previous self; yat - the situation in which; smaret - remembers; punaḼ - any more; jantoḼ - of the living entity; vai - indeed; kasyacit hetoḼ - for any reason or other; máštyuḼ - known as death; atyanta - total; vismáštiḼ - forgetfulness.
Depending on oneâs karma, or fruitive activities, one may achieve a beautiful, wealthy or powerful body or be degraded to an abominable condition of life. Taking birth in heaven or in hell, the living entity learns to completely identify his ego with the new body and thus becomes absorbed in the pleasure, fear, opulence or suffering of the new body, completely forgetting the experiences of the previous body. Death occurs when the specific karma allotted to a physical body is finished. Since that particular bodyâs karma is used up, it can no longer act upon oneâs mind; in that way one forgets the previous body. The new body is created by nature so that one can experience the karma currently in effect. Consequently oneâs entire consciousness becomes absorbed in oneâs current body in order that one can fully experience the results of his previous activities. Because the living entity falsely identifies himself as the body, bodily death is experienced as death of the soul. Actually, however, the soul is eternal and is never subject to creation or annihilation. This analytic knowledge of self-realization is easily understood in KášášŁáša consciousness.