Preta-lakṣaṇa and Svapna-nimitta: Dream Portents of Preta-affliction and the Prescribed Remedies
वृषभारोहणं स्वप्ने वृषभैः सह गच्छति / उत्पत्य गगनं याति तीर्थे याति क्षुधातुरः
vṛṣabhārohaṇaṃ svapne vṛṣabhaiḥ saha gacchati / utpatya gaganaṃ yāti tīrthe yāti kṣudhāturaḥ
Wenn man im Traum einen Stier besteigt und mit Stieren dahinzieht, oder plötzlich emporsteigt und durch den Himmel schreitet, oder, vom Hunger gequält, zu einem Tīrtha, einer heiligen Furt, geht, so gilt dies als bedeutsames Traumomen.
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda)
Afterlife Stage: Yamaloka Journey
Concept: Dream symbols—vehicles (bull), ascent (sky), and tīrtha—can indicate karmic turning points; hunger underscores unmet obligations or impending transition.
Vedantic Theme: Impermanence and the mind’s symbolic language; karmic momentum (saṃskāra) surfacing as omens.
Application: Increase dharmic steadiness: charity, vows, tīrtha-visit if appropriate, and ensure family rites are in order; cultivate Vishnu-smaraṇa to stabilize fear.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Type: oneiric sacred landscape
Related Themes: Garuda Purana Pretakalpa: svapna-nimitta lists including ascent/flight and animal vehicles as death-omens
This verse treats specific dream-images—bull-riding, flying in the sky, and going to a tīrtha while hungry—as meaningful संकेत (nimitta), used in the Preta Kanda to frame discussions on mortality and the need for timely dharmic preparation.
Indirectly: by listing omens that signal transition and vulnerability (such as hunger and unusual movement), it supports the Preta Kanda’s broader theme that one should be attentive to signs and align life with dharma before the soul’s post-death journey is described.
Treat unsettling or extraordinary dreams as prompts for self-correction—renew ethical conduct, reduce harmful habits, and (if tradition is followed) increase prayer/charity and remembrance of dharma rather than fear.