Kāraṇānvēṣaṇam: The 32 Marks of Hari, Defects (Doṣas), Death-Omens, and Hari’s Omnipresence in Social & Household Life
द्वाविंशत्या लक्षणैः संयुतस्तु दशभिर्देषैः प्रवहो नाम वायुः / तथाङ्गुष्ठे किञ्चिदाधिक्यमस्ति विंशत्येकादशभिर्देषतोर्कः
dvāviṃśatyā lakṣaṇaiḥ saṃyutastu daśabhirdeṣaiḥ pravaho nāma vāyuḥ / tathāṅguṣṭhe kiñcidādhikyamasti viṃśatyekādaśabhirdeṣatorkaḥ
El aliento vital llamado Pravaha está dotado de veintidós signos y se extiende por diez medidas (deśa). En el pulgar hay un leve exceso; y Arka, otra corriente vital, se extiende, según la medida, por veintiún deśa.
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda/Vainateya)
Concept: Prana-vayu differentiation and quantified extension (desa) as a means to understand embodied life-force.
Vedantic Theme: Ksetra–ksetrajna discernment: observing the body’s functions as knowable phenomena distinct from the knower.
Application: Use as a contemplative diagnostic map in pranayama/meditation: attend to pranic flow points (e.g., thumb/angustha) and cultivate detached observation of bodily currents.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: body-microcosm
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.22 (prana-vayu/laksana enumeration context)
This verse presents Pravaha as a specifically defined vital wind with a fixed set of characteristics and a measurable extent, showing that the Purana treats the subtle-body functions with technical precision relevant to the soul’s post-death journey.
By detailing named vāyus and their measures within the body, the text frames the departed being’s experience as governed by subtle physiological forces; these prāṇic currents support movement and sensation in the preta (subtle) condition described in the Preta Kanda.
It encourages disciplined living and prāṇa-awareness (through ethical conduct, regulated habits, and prayer/meditation), recognizing that inner vitality is structured and consequential—an idea echoed in Garuda Purana discussions of death preparation and rites.