Pāṇḍu-Śotha Nidāna: Doṣa-wise Signs, Complications, and Prognosis
अतिमात्रं यदासेवेद्गुरुमत्यन्तशीतलम् / लवणक्षारतीक्ष्णाम्लशाकाम्बुस्वप्नजागरम्
atimātraṃ yadāsevedgurumatyantaśītalam / lavaṇakṣāratīkṣṇāmlaśākāmbusvapnajāgaram
若人过度贪食厚重之物与极寒之品,又多取咸、碱、辛烈、酸味之食,兼食叶菜,饮水过多,睡眠失度——或嗜睡,或久醒不寐——此等习惯皆令病势增炽。
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Dosha: Mixed
Concept: Ati-sevana (excess) of guru (heavy), atyanta-śīta (very cold), and rasa extremes (lavaṇa/kṣāra/tīkṣṇa/amla), along with irregular sleep, aggravates disorder.
Vedantic Theme: Sattvic regulation of senses (indriya-nigraha) supports clarity; excess strengthens rajas/tamas and destabilizes the instrument of practice.
Application: Adopt moderation in diet; avoid frequent extremes (very cold, overly salty/sour/pungent/alkaline); regularize sleep-wake cycle; monitor water intake.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.162 (nidāna: āhāra-vihāra causes of śotha/doṣa aggravation)
This verse lists specific food qualities—heavy, very cold, salty, alkaline, pungent, sour—that can aggravate disorders like swelling, emphasizing regulated diet.
The focus here is bodily discipline rather than the soul’s post-death route; it implies that right living supports dharmic, healthy embodiment.
Moderate heavy/cold foods, strong tastes (salt/sour/pungent), excess water intake, and keep sleep-wake cycles steady.