An exposition on the fruits of charity and on entry into a body
Garbhotpatti, Piṇḍa-śarīra, and Antya-kāla-kriyā
विष्णुस्थाने गुरुं विद्याच्छ्रुक्रे शुक्रो व्यवस्थितः / नाभिस्थाने स्थितो मन्दो मुखे राहुः स्थितः सदा
viṣṇusthāne guruṃ vidyācchrukre śukro vyavasthitaḥ / nābhisthāne sthito mando mukhe rāhuḥ sthitaḥ sadā
جان لو کہ وِشنو کے مقام میں گُرو (برہسپتی) رہتا ہے؛ شُکر منی کے مقام میں قائم ہے۔ ناف کے خطّے میں مَند (زحل) ہے اور منہ میں راہو ہمیشہ ٹھہرا رہتا ہے۔
Lord Vishnu
Concept: Microcosm–macrocosm identity: planetary forces are distributed in bodily loci, implying karmic/astrological influences embodied.
Vedantic Theme: Deha as kṣetra; ordered cosmos reflected in the individual (loka–piṇḍa-sāmya) supporting self-inquiry and disciplined living.
Application: Use as a contemplative mapping in japa/nyāsa or in jyotiṣa-informed self-observation; cultivate restraint knowing graha-influences operate through the body.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: subtle-anatomical locus
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 2.32.117-119 (graha distribution in the body); Garuda Purana 2.32 (jyotiṣa/śarīra-graha sambandha context)
This verse links specific grahas (Guru, Śukra, Manda, Rāhu) to bodily seats, presenting a Purāṇic model where cosmic forces correspond to subtle-physical loci relevant to ritual and spiritual understanding.
By describing a structured subtle anatomy influenced by grahas, it implies the embodied condition (and its forces) is ordered and intelligible—background knowledge used in the Preta Kanda while discussing post-death states and ritual supports.
Use it as a contemplative reminder of the body–cosmos relationship: cultivate sattvic conduct and disciplined speech (mouth), moderation (seed/impulses), and steadiness (navel/center), aligning life with dharma rather than compulsion.