ayÄta-yÄmÄs tasyÄsan
yÄmÄḼ svÄntara-yÄpanÄḼ
Ĺášášvato dhyÄyato viᚣášoḼ
kurvato bruvataḼ kathÄḼ
ayÄta-yÄmÄḼ - time never lost; tasya - of Manu; Äsan - were; yÄmÄḼ - the hours; sva-antara - his duration of life; yÄpanÄḼ - bringing to an end; ĹášášvataḼ - hearing; dhyÄyataḼ - contemplating; viᚣášoḼ - of Lord Viᚣášu; kurvataḼ - acting; bruvataḼ - speaking; kathÄḼ - the topics.
As freshly prepared food is very tasteful but if kept for three or four hours becomes stale and tasteless, so the existence of material enjoyment can endure as long as life is fresh, but at the fag end of life everything becomes tasteless, and everything appears to be vain and painful. The life of Emperor SvÄyambhuva Manu, however, was not tasteless; as he grew older, his life remained as fresh as in the beginning because of his continued KášášŁáša consciousness. The life of a man in KášášŁáša consciousness is always fresh. It is said that the sun rises in the morning and sets in the evening and its business is to reduce the duration of everyoneâs life. But the sunrise and sunset cannot diminish the life of one who engages in KášášŁáša consciousness. SvÄyambhuva Manuâs life did not become stale after some time, for he engaged himself always in chanting about and meditating upon Lord Viᚣášu. He was the greatest yogÄŤ because he never wasted his time. It is especially mentioned here, viᚣášoḼ kurvato bruvataḼ kathÄḼ. When he talked, he talked only of KášášŁáša and Viᚣášu, the Personality of Godhead; when he heard something, it was about KášášŁáša; when he meditated, it was upon KášášŁáša and His activities.
It is stated that his life was very long, seventy-one yugas. One yuga is completed in 4,320,000 years, seventy-one of such yugas is the duration of the life of a Manu, and fourteen such Manus come and go in one day of Brahma. For the entire duration of his life â 4,320,000 × 71 years â Manu engaged in KášášŁáša consciousness by chanting, hearing, talking about and meditating upon KášášŁáša. Therefore, his life was not wasted, nor did it become stale.