The wood sinks if it becomes too heavy. Similarly, a person sinks into the "ocean of misery" by accumulating too many social obligations or excessive burdens beyond their capacity.
For the wood, this is getting stuck on the riverbank. For humans, it is excessive attachment to worldly interests like food, sleep, and fear that prevents progress. The wood sinks if it becomes too heavy
The Guru identifies four specific barriers that can prevent both the wood and humans from reaching their destination: For humans, it is excessive attachment to worldly
For the wood, a whirlpool keeps it spinning in one place. In human life, "whirlpools" are vices like gambling, drinking, and theft, which trap a person and prevent them from moving forward. In the GSEB Class 10 Sanskrit curriculum, Chapter
In the GSEB Class 10 Sanskrit curriculum, Chapter 6, , uses a powerful metaphor of a floating piece of wood to explain the journey of human life. The Core Metaphor
A Guru, while walking along the banks of a river with his disciple, spots a piece of wood () being carried by the current toward the ocean. He explains that just as this wood will reach the ocean if it avoids certain obstacles, humans can reach the "ocean of happiness" if they navigate their own life challenges. The Wood: Represents a human being. The River: Represents life. The Family: Represents the flow of water. Love: Represents the water itself that sustains the flow. The Four Obstacles (Vighna)