Śiva-taught Mantra-Weapons, Mudrās, and Rakṣā-Rites
Removal of Kīlaka; Protection from Nāga, Viṣa, Graha, and Storms
ॐ नमः / इन्द्रवज्रं करे ध्यात्वा दुष्टमेघादिवारणम् / विष शत्रुगणा भूता नश्यन्ते वज्रमुद्रया
oṃ namaḥ / indravajraṃ kare dhyātvā duṣṭameghādivāraṇam / viṣa śatrugaṇā bhūtā naśyante vajramudrayā
«أوم، نَمَح». بتأمّل صاعقة إندرا (vajra) في اليد—وهي تردّ السحب الخبيثة وما شابه—يُباد السُّمّ وجموع الأعداء والأرواح الشريرة بمدرا الفاجرا (Vajra-mudrā).
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vinatā-putra)
Concept: Dhyāna (visualization) combined with mudrā functions as an operative ritual technology to dispel obstacles—external (storm, enemies) and subtle (bhūtas).
Vedantic Theme: Mind as instrument: saṅkalpa and focused attention (ekāgratā) channel power; disciplined action transforms fear into agency.
Application: Use embodied focus (breath + hand gesture + visualization) to stabilize the mind under threat; pair inner clarity with outer protective measures.
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: ritual-space
Related Themes: Garuda Purana sequences of mudrā-prayoga and rakṣā-mantras in the same chapter cluster
This verse presents Vajra Mudra as a protective ritual act: by visualizing Indra’s vajra and forming the mudrā, one is said to neutralize poison, repel hostile forces, and dispel bhūtas (malevolent spirits).
It does not directly describe the soul’s post-death journey; rather, it belongs to the practical, protective-ritual layer of the text—meant to remove obstacles and harmful influences that can disturb dharmic life and rites.
Use it as a reminder that disciplined visualization, prayerful intent, and dharmic conduct are traditionally paired with ritual gestures for steadiness and protection—especially when performing sacred duties or facing fear and hostility.