Śiva-taught Mantra-Weapons, Mudrās, and Rakṣā-Rites
Removal of Kīlaka; Protection from Nāga, Viṣa, Graha, and Storms
ॐ नमः / इन्द्रवज्रं करे ध्यात्वा दुष्टमेघादिवारणम् / विष शत्रुगणा भूता नश्यन्ते वज्रमुद्रया
oṃ namaḥ / indravajraṃ kare dhyātvā duṣṭameghādivāraṇam / viṣa śatrugaṇā bhūtā naśyante vajramudrayā
Om, salutasi. Dengan bermeditasi membayangkan vajra Indra di tangan—yang menangkis awan jahat dan seumpamanya—racun, kumpulan musuh, dan roh jahat dimusnahkan oleh mudrā Vajra.
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vinatā-putra)
Concept: Dhyāna (visualization) combined with mudrā functions as an operative ritual technology to dispel obstacles—external (storm, enemies) and subtle (bhūtas).
Vedantic Theme: Mind as instrument: saṅkalpa and focused attention (ekāgratā) channel power; disciplined action transforms fear into agency.
Application: Use embodied focus (breath + hand gesture + visualization) to stabilize the mind under threat; pair inner clarity with outer protective measures.
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: ritual-space
Related Themes: Garuda Purana sequences of mudrā-prayoga and rakṣā-mantras in the same chapter cluster
This verse presents Vajra Mudra as a protective ritual act: by visualizing Indra’s vajra and forming the mudrā, one is said to neutralize poison, repel hostile forces, and dispel bhūtas (malevolent spirits).
It does not directly describe the soul’s post-death journey; rather, it belongs to the practical, protective-ritual layer of the text—meant to remove obstacles and harmful influences that can disturb dharmic life and rites.
Use it as a reminder that disciplined visualization, prayerful intent, and dharmic conduct are traditionally paired with ritual gestures for steadiness and protection—especially when performing sacred duties or facing fear and hostility.