Bhaiṣajya-yogas: Digestive Modakas, Vāta-Śamana Oils, Karṇa-Roga Tailas, Kuṣṭha/Śvitra Applications, Vraṇa-Cikitsā, and Medhya Preparations
गर्भमश्वतरी विन्द्यात्किं पुनर्मानुषी हर / अश्वानां वातभग्नानां कुञ्जराणां नृणां तथा / तैलमेतत्प्रयोक्तव्यं सर्ववातविकारिणाम्
garbhamaśvatarī vindyātkiṃ punarmānuṣī hara / aśvānāṃ vātabhagnānāṃ kuñjarāṇāṃ nṛṇāṃ tathā / tailametatprayoktavyaṃ sarvavātavikāriṇām
إن كانت الفرسُ الحاملُ تنالُ به فرجًا، فكم بالحريّ الإنسان، يا هاري. فهذا الزيتُ يُستعمل للخيول المصابة بكسورٍ من عللِ الفاتا، وللفيلة، وللناس أيضًا—بل لكلّ الاضطرابات الناشئة عن الفاتا.
Lord Vishnu (Hari) instructing Garuda (Vinata-putra) in an Ayurvedic/therapeutic context
Dosha: Vata
Concept: Compassionate, inclusive application of healing—across species—and confidence grounded in observed efficacy; vāta as key etiological frame.
Vedantic Theme: Īśvara-smṛti within worldly action (bhakti within pravṛtti); loka-saṅgraha through care.
Application: Use the oil for vāta-origin disorders, including injuries/fracture-like vāta conditions, and adapt responsibly for veterinary and human contexts.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.192.7-10 (same formulation and benefits)
This verse treats vāta as a primary cause of pain, fracture-like weakness, and other ailments, emphasizing practical therapeutic measures (oil application) within the text’s broader dharma and wellbeing teachings.
It does not describe the soul’s journey here; instead, it presents embodied-care guidance, implying that maintaining bodily balance (especially vāta) supports dharmic living and resilience.
Use it as a traditional principle: vāta-aggravated conditions are often managed with appropriate oil-based therapies under qualified Ayurvedic guidance, especially for pain, stiffness, and weakness.