Mukti-tattva Upadeśa: Knowledge as the Direct Cause of Liberation
जरादर्शितपन्थानं प्रचण्डव्याधिसैनिकम् / अधिष्ठितो मृत्युशत्रुं त्रातारं किं न पश्यति
jarādarśitapanthānaṃ pracaṇḍavyādhisainikam / adhiṣṭhito mṛtyuśatruṃ trātāraṃ kiṃ na paśyati
إذا كشفت الشيخوخةُ الطريقَ وحاصرته جيوشُ الأمراض العاتية، فلماذا لا يُبصر الإنسان—وهو مُواجَهٌ بذلك—المُخلِّصَ، عدوَّ الموت؟
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue with Garuda)
Concept: In the face of jarā (aging) and vyādhi (disease), one should recognize and seek the ‘trātā’—the divine savior who overcomes death.
Vedantic Theme: Turning from deha-abhimāna (body-identification) to śaraṇāgati (surrender); the Lord as amṛtatva-prada (giver of immortality) beyond māyā’s decay.
Application: Use illness/aging as a spiritual alarm: intensify nāma-smaraṇa, prayer, and ethical living; cultivate surrender rather than denial; keep a daily remembrance practice.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: path/road (metaphorical)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana themes: jarā-vyādhi as signs; refuge in Vishnu as deliverer from fear of death (general internal thematic link)
This verse frames old age and illness as clear signs that death is approaching, urging a person to turn toward the true refuge—Vishnu—rather than remain spiritually negligent.
By calling life’s decline a ‘path’ and diseases an ‘army,’ it stresses that the embodied being is inevitably driven toward death, so remembrance of the Death-conquering Lord becomes the essential preparation for the post-death journey.
Treat aging and recurring illness as prompts to simplify life, strengthen dharma, and cultivate steady devotion and remembrance of God—so the mind is trained before the final crisis.