An exposition on the fruits of charity and on entry into a body
Garbhotpatti, Piṇḍa-śarīra, and Antya-kāla-kriyā
श्लेष्माणश्च षडूर्ध्वञ्च विण्मूत्रं तत्प्रमाणतः / अस्थ्नां हि ह्यधिकं प्रोक्तं षष्ट्युत्तरशतत्रयात्
śleṣmāṇaśca ṣaḍūrdhvañca viṇmūtraṃ tatpramāṇataḥ / asthnāṃ hi hyadhikaṃ proktaṃ ṣaṣṭyuttaraśatatrayāt
เสมหะและสสารหกประการที่อยู่ส่วนบน พร้อมทั้งอุจจาระและปัสสาวะ—ล้วนกล่าวตามปริมาณที่กำหนดไว้ แต่จำนวนกระดูกกล่าวว่ายิ่งกว่าสามร้อยหกสิบ
Lord Vishnu
Dosha: Kapha
Concept: The body includes mucus, wastes, and numerous bones—an aggregate not fit for egoic glorification.
Vedantic Theme: Aśuci/anitya contemplation supporting vairāgya; body as composite instrument, not ultimate identity.
Application: Practice cleanliness and health discipline without vanity; use awareness of bodily wastes to reduce craving and cultivate equanimity.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 2.32.53-55, 2.32.57 (piṇḍa explained; karma results)
This verse frames the body as a quantifiable, perishable aggregate—supporting detachment and preparing the listener for teachings on the preta (post-death) condition and rites connected to the body’s impermanence.
By emphasizing the body’s material components and their limits, the text contrasts the decaying physical frame with the continuing journey of the jīva, which becomes central in later descriptions of post-death passages and ritual supports.
Use it to cultivate vairāgya (dispassion): care for the body responsibly, but remember it is a finite compound—helping reduce fear of death and encouraging dharmic living and mindful performance of ancestral rites.