Arocaka (Loss of Appetite): Nidāna, Doṣa-Lakṣaṇa, and Doṣaja Vomiting (Chardi) Markers
नाभिपृष्ठं रुजत्याशु पार्श्वे चाहारमुत्क्षिपेत् / ततो विच्छ्रिन्नल्पाल्पकषायं फेनिलं वमेत्
nābhipṛṣṭhaṃ rujatyāśu pārśve cāhāramutkṣipet / tato vicchrinnalpālpakaṣāyaṃ phenilaṃ vamet
إذا نهض الألم سريعًا في موضع السُّرّة والظهر، وابتُلي الجانبان أيضًا، قذف الطعام بالقيء. ثم يعود فيتقيّأ مرارًا—قليلًا قليلًا—مادةً ممزوجةً بالصفراء ورغوية.
Lord Viṣṇu (speaking to Garuḍa/Vinatā-putra)
Dosha: Pitta
Concept: The body’s processes culminate in pain and expulsion; clinging to bodily comfort is unstable.
Vedantic Theme: Asat-like perishability of the body; disidentification (dehābhimāna-tyāga) supports inner freedom.
Application: Practice equanimity toward bodily discomfort; keep affairs and relationships resolved; maintain remembrance practices before severe decline.
Primary Rasa: bibhatsa
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: sequential symptom descriptions of dying (vomiting, pain, breath distress) in the same chapter context
This verse functions as an ariṣṭa-lakṣaṇa (ominous/critical sign), mapping bodily indicators of severe decline so one may turn to dharma, repentance, and proper rites with awareness.
By noting intense pain and repeated bile-froth vomiting, the text highlights the body’s breakdown that precedes separation of the jīva from the gross body, setting the stage for post-death transitions and prescribed observances.
Treat it as a reminder to prepare ethically and spiritually—maintain dharmic living, keep end-of-life wishes/rites known, and seek timely medical care while cultivating remembrance of the divine.