Anupāna and the Doṣa-Effects of Foods, Waters, Dairy, Oils, and Preparations
रौच्यमग्निकरं रूक्षं कफघ्नंलघु नैर्झरम् / दीपनं पित्तलं कौपमौद्भिदं पित्तनाशनम्
raucyamagnikaraṃ rūkṣaṃ kaphaghnaṃlaghu nairjharam / dīpanaṃ pittalaṃ kaupamaudbhidaṃ pittanāśanam
ماءُ النبعِ مُستساغٌ يفتحُ الشهيّة، ويُقوّي الأَغني (نارَ الهضم)، وهو مُجفِّفٌ، مُزيلٌ للكَفَه (البلغم)، وخفيفٌ. أمّا ماءُ البئرِ فيُوقِدُ الهضمَ لكنّه يميلُ إلى زيادةِ البِتّا (الحرارة الصفراوية). والماءُ الذي يَنبُعُ من الأرضِ طبيعياً يُقال إنّه يُسكّنُ البِتّا.
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda)
Dosha: Kapha/Pitta
Concept: Right choice of water according to its source and its effect on agni and doṣas.
Vedantic Theme: Sharira as an instrument for dharma-sādhana; maintaining sattvic equilibrium supports higher pursuits.
Application: Choose spring-water for lightness and kapha reduction; use well-water cautiously if pitta is high; prefer natural upwelling water when pitta aggravation is present.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.169.38-41 (continuation of dravya-guṇa: water and milk qualities)
The verse praises spring-water as light and kapha-reducing while strengthening digestive fire, indicating its suitability for sluggish digestion and heaviness.
It focuses on bodily and dietary regulation rather than afterlife geography; in the Purana’s broader frame, such regulation supports sattva, purity, and readiness for rites that affect post-death welfare.
Match water type to symptoms: use lighter, cleaner sources when kapha is high; if prone to heat/acidity (pitta), avoid overly heating waters and prefer cooling, non-irritating sources—always ensuring safety and potability.