Preta-bhāva: Causes, Remedies, and the Rationale of Post-death Rites
Question-Catalogue
दिनेदिने च दातव्यं घटान्नं प्रेततृप्तये / प्राप्ते काले च म्रियते अनित्यो मानवः प्रभो
dinedine ca dātavyaṃ ghaṭānnaṃ pretatṛptaye / prāpte kāle ca mriyate anityo mānavaḥ prabho
ప్రేత తృప్తి కోసం ప్రతిరోజూ ఒక ఘట పరిమాణం వండిన అన్నం దానం చేయాలి. ఎందుకంటే కాలం వచ్చినప్పుడు మనిషి మరణిస్తాడు; ప్రభూ, మానవుడు అనిత్యుడు.
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vainateya)
Afterlife Stage: Pretayoni
Ritual Type: Ekoddishta
Beneficiary: Pitr
Timing: Daily during the preta period (commonly within the daśāha/first days as prescribed)
Concept: Anityatā (impermanence) and the necessity of timely righteous action; daily offering as compassionate duty while cultivating detachment.
Vedantic Theme: Vairāgya born of mortality; karma performed without delay as preparation for higher pursuit.
Application: Offer daily cooked food (as prescribed) during the preta period; let the reminder of death motivate ethical living, reconciliation, and spiritual practice now.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: household offering space (daily)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana Pretakalpa 2.28 (daily preta offerings; daśāha regimen); Garuda Purana teachings on anityatā and urgency of dharma (various chapters)
This verse states that giving a daily measured offering of cooked food is meant for preta-tṛpti—supporting and appeasing the departed in the preta state as part of prescribed post-death rites.
By naming the departed as a “preta,” the verse reflects the intermediate condition after death where ritual support is advised; it also frames the teaching with the certainty of death at the appointed time, emphasizing preparation through dharmic rites.
Remember impermanence and act promptly in dharma: perform family death-rites conscientiously (as per tradition and guidance), and cultivate daily charity/offerings with the awareness that life ends when time matures.