Krimi-nidāna: Types of External and Internal Parasites and Their Symptoms
पक्वाशये पुरीषोत्था जायन्ते ऽथोविसर्पिणः / वृद्धास्ते स्युर्भवेयुश्च ते यदामाशयोन्मुखाः
pakvāśaye purīṣotthā jāyante 'thovisarpiṇaḥ / vṛddhāste syurbhaveyuśca te yadāmāśayonmukhāḥ
في البَكْوَاشَيَة (الأمعاء الغليظة) تنشأ ديدان مولودة من الغائط، ثم تبدأ بالزحف. تقوى وتشتدّ؛ فإذا توجّهت نحو الآمَاشَيَة (المعدة) نشطت وظهرت آثارها.
Lord Vishnu (narrating to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Neglect of purity and right regimen allows harmful forces to proliferate; effects manifest when latent causes ‘turn upward’.
Vedantic Theme: Deha is a mutable, impure aggregate; discernment (viveka) reduces attachment and prompts right conduct.
Application: Attend to digestion and elimination; avoid habits that create āma/impurity; seek corrective regimen early before escalation.
Primary Rasa: bibhatsa
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Type: internal-body
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.165.12 (manifest signs via breath/belching); Garuda Purana 1.165.14 (symptom list)
This verse uses krimi as a concrete image of bodily impurity and suffering, showing how internal conditions can become active and produce distress.
Indirectly: by emphasizing embodied suffering, it supports the text’s broader teaching that karma binds the jīva to physical conditions and their painful consequences.
Cultivate purity of food and conduct, and treat the body as a field of discipline—reducing causes of harm (excess, negligence) that lead to suffering.