Viṣa-hara Yogas: Puṣya-Nakṣatra Remedies for Serpents, Stings, and Compounded Poisons
तार्क्ष्यमूर्तिं वहेद्यो वै भल्लूकदन्तनिर्मिताम् / स पन्नगैर्न दृश्येत यावज्जीवं वृषध्वज
tārkṣyamūrtiṃ vahedyo vai bhallūkadantanirmitām / sa pannagairna dṛśyeta yāvajjīvaṃ vṛṣadhvaja
اے وِرشَدھوج (شیو)! جو بھالو کے دانت سے بنی تارکشیہ (گرُڑ) کی مورتی دھارَن کرے، وہ عمر بھر سانپوں کو دکھائی نہیں دیتا۔
Narrator/Ācārya voice addressing Vṛṣadhvaja (Śiva) while prescribing a protective charm connected to Garuḍa
Concept: Protective power arises from association with Garuḍa’s form—devotional symbolism functioning as apotropaic protection.
Vedantic Theme: Nāma-rūpa as upāsanā-support: sacred form as conduit of divine protection within worldly peril.
Application: Wear/keep a Garuḍa image (here specified as bear-tooth crafted) as a continual serpent-warding amulet.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Type: personal body/amulet-bearing context
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.191: Garuḍa-rakṣā and anti-sarpa measures
This verse presents Garuḍa’s image as a direct apotropaic (warding) force: carrying his form is said to make one ‘unseen’ to serpents, highlighting Garuḍa’s traditional role as the overpowerer of nāgas.
It prescribes a specific material talisman—an image of Garuḍa made from a bear’s tooth—claiming that serpents will not perceive the bearer throughout life, implying ritual-material support for safety in addition to devotion.
As a modern takeaway, it encourages cultivating protective discipline—faith, caution in risky environments, and reverence for protective symbols—while treating such prescriptions as part of traditional ritual culture rather than a substitute for medical care and safety.