Veṅkaṭeśa-Māhātmya: Varāha Prelude, Descent of Śeṣācala, Svāmipuṣkariṇī and the Network of Tīrthas
with Dāna-Lakṣaṇas
फणोन्नता प्रबुद्धा स्यात्सप्तलक्षफणान्विता / तत्रापि दुर्लभा सुप्ता महाभाग्यकरीस्मृता
phaṇonnatā prabuddhā syātsaptalakṣaphaṇānvitā / tatrāpi durlabhā suptā mahābhāgyakarīsmṛtā
当完全觉醒时,(她)被说为昂起诸蛇冠而起,具足七十万蛇冠;然而即便如此,“沉睡”之态亦极难得,被忆念为赐予大福德者。
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Awakened śeṣa-mūrti manifests immense, multi-hooded potency; yet the rare ‘sleeping’ condition is deemed highly auspicious.
Vedantic Theme: Power (śakti) must be integrated with stillness; auspiciousness lies in mastery—latent containment rather than mere display.
Application: Balance spiritual intensity with steadiness: cultivate deep rest (nididhyāsana-like absorption), avoid performative ‘power’; prioritize inner integration and humility.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Type: inner yogic-cosmic visualization
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.26.119 (two states); Garuda Purana 3.26.121 (mokṣa-giving progression)
The verse treats the 'sleeping' condition as exceptionally rare and therefore especially auspicious—its occurrence is remembered as bringing great fortune.
It reads like Vishnu’s descriptive instruction to Garuda, classifying states/conditions and highlighting which are rare and yield significant results (here, great good fortune).
It encourages discernment: not all striking manifestations are equal—rare, calm/dormant conditions can be valued as highly auspicious, promoting patience and reverence rather than impulsive reaction.