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
Si aun una yegua preñada halla alivio por medio de ello, ¡cuánto más un ser humano, oh Hari! Este aceite debe aplicarse a los caballos con fracturas relacionadas con vāta, a los elefantes y también a los hombres; en verdad, para todos los trastornos que nacen de vāta.
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.