Arocaka (Loss of Appetite): Nidāna, Doṣa-Lakṣaṇa, and Doṣaja Vomiting (Chardi) Markers
नाभिपृष्ठं रुजत्याशु पार्श्वे चाहारमुत्क्षिपेत् / ततो विच्छ्रिन्नल्पाल्पकषायं फेनिलं वमेत्
nābhipṛṣṭhaṃ rujatyāśu pārśve cāhāramutkṣipet / tato vicchrinnalpālpakaṣāyaṃ phenilaṃ vamet
নাভি আৰু পিঠিৰ অঞ্চলত সোনকালে বিষ উঠে, আৰু কাষতো পীড়া হয়; তেতিয়া সি আহাৰ উগলি পেলায়। তাৰ পিছত পুনঃপুনঃ অলপ অলপকৈ কষায়যুক্ত ফেনিল পদাৰ্থ বমি কৰে।
Lord Viṣṇu (speaking to Garuḍa/Vinatā-putra)
Dosha: Pitta
Concept: The body’s processes culminate in pain and expulsion; clinging to bodily comfort is unstable.
Vedantic Theme: Asat-like perishability of the body; disidentification (dehābhimāna-tyāga) supports inner freedom.
Application: Practice equanimity toward bodily discomfort; keep affairs and relationships resolved; maintain remembrance practices before severe decline.
Primary Rasa: bibhatsa
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: sequential symptom descriptions of dying (vomiting, pain, breath distress) in the same chapter context
This verse functions as an ariṣṭa-lakṣaṇa (ominous/critical sign), mapping bodily indicators of severe decline so one may turn to dharma, repentance, and proper rites with awareness.
By noting intense pain and repeated bile-froth vomiting, the text highlights the body’s breakdown that precedes separation of the jīva from the gross body, setting the stage for post-death transitions and prescribed observances.
Treat it as a reminder to prepare ethically and spiritually—maintain dharmic living, keep end-of-life wishes/rites known, and seek timely medical care while cultivating remembrance of the divine.