Nirūpaṇa (Nāḍī–Svara-Nirūpaṇam): Breath Currents, Omens, and Action-Timing
भोजने मैथुने युद्धे पिङ्गला सिद्धिदायिका / उच्चाटमारणाद्येषु कर्मस्वेतेषु पिङ्गला
bhojane maithune yuddhe piṅgalā siddhidāyikā / uccāṭamāraṇādyeṣu karmasveteṣu piṅgalā
No comer, na união sexual e na batalha, Piṅgalā é a doadora de siddhi (realização). E em ritos como uccāṭana (expulsão) e māraṇa (matança), também nessas ações é Piṅgalā quem concede o êxito.
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Dosha: Pitta
Concept: Piṅgalā current empowers success in eating, sexual union, battle, and forceful rites like expulsion and killing.
Vedantic Theme: Prāṇa as instrument of karma; ethical valence depends on intention and dharma—power without discernment binds.
Application: Recognize heightened ‘solar’ drive states; channel them into dharmic, disciplined outlets (training, protection, decisive work) and avoid harmful/violent applications.
Primary Rasa: raudra
Secondary Rasa: vira
Type: subtle-body (piṅgalā nāḍī; solar current)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.67.13 (piṅgalā inclines to harsh acts; iḍā for auspicious tasks); Garuda Purana 1.67.12 (solar/lunar mapping)
This verse presents Piṅgalā as a siddhi-granting power specifically connected with success in ordinary acts (eating, union, battle) and also in forceful ritual acts like uccāṭana and māraṇa.
It does not directly describe the soul’s post-death journey; instead, it highlights how particular śaktis/ritual forces are believed to influence outcomes of actions, which in broader Purāṇic thought links actions (karma) with consequences.
Treat it as a reminder that intentions and chosen methods shape outcomes; prioritize dhārmic conduct and avoid harmful applications of power, focusing on self-control and ethical responsibility.