Aśva–Gaja Āyurveda: Marks, Defects, Wounds, Doṣa-Therapy, and Protective Rites
तिलञ्चैव वचां हिगुं बध्नीयाद्वाजिनो गले / आगन्तुजं दोषजन्तु व्रणं द्विविधमीरितम्
tilañcaiva vacāṃ higuṃ badhnīyādvājino gale / āgantujaṃ doṣajantu vraṇaṃ dvividhamīritam
घोड़े के गले में तिल, वचा और हींग बाँधनी चाहिए। शास्त्र कहता है कि व्रण दो प्रकार के हैं—आगन्तुक और दोष‑जन्तुजन्य।
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda)
Concept: Care of dependent beings (animals) through preventive measures and correct diagnosis (external vs internal causes).
Vedantic Theme: Loka-saṅgraha (upholding order through right action)
Application: Apply preventive amuletic/herbal tying for animals; distinguish āgantuja (external) from doṣa-jantu (internal/dosha-organism) before treatment.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.201 (Ayurveda/veterinary section): subsequent verses on doṣa-wise wound signs and formulations
This verse highlights a diagnostic principle: some wounds come from external injury (āgantuja), while others arise from internal imbalance and infestation/organisms (doṣa-jantu), guiding different lines of treatment.
It does not address the soul’s journey here; this passage is a practical, body-focused instruction on protection and wound-causation, showing the text’s inclusion of applied dharma and traditional healing.
Use the underlying principle: distinguish external injury from internally driven conditions (imbalance/infection) before choosing remedies, and treat protective/ritual measures as supportive—not a substitute for appropriate medical care.