Garbha Upanishad
Garbha Upanishad
Garbha Upanishad
Garbha Upanishad
॥ गभ पिनषत ् ॥
ॐ सह नाववतु । सह नौ भुन ु ।
सहवीय करवावहै । तेज ःव नावधीतमःतु ।
मा व षावहै ॥
ॐ शा तः शा तः शा तः ॥
The body is fivefold in nature (the five elements), existing in the five, depending
on the six supports (tastes of food), connected with the six qualities, [consisting
of] seven dhātus (tissues), three impurities, having two yonis (sexes), and
[nourished by] four kinds of food.
How is it pancātmakam (five-fold)? Because of the five: earth, water, fire, air and
ether. In this five-fold body, what is earth, what is water, what is fire, what is air,
and what is ether? It is said that what is hard is earth, what is fluid is water, what
is warm is fire, what moves is air, and what is space is ether.
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वायुगम
र् ने आकाशमवकाशूदाने ।
पृथक् ौोऽे श दोपल धौ वक् ःपश च ष
ु ी पे ज ा रसने
नािसकाऽऽयाणे उपःथ ान दनेऽपानमु सग बु या
बु यित मनसा स क पयित वाचा वदित ।
There the earth is to support, water is to consolidate, fire is for light, air is for
movement, and ether is to provide space. Separately, ears are to receive words,
the skin for touch, eyes to see form, tongue for taste, and nose for smell. The
genitalia are for pleasure and apāna for evacuation. One cognizes with the
intellect (buddhi), envisions with the mind (manas), and speaks with words (vāk).
ु
षडाौयिमित कःमात ् मधुरा ललवणित कटकषायरसा व दते ।
ष जषर्भगा धारम यमप चमधैवतिनषादा ेित ।
इ ािन श दसं ाः ू णधान श वधा भव त ॥ १ ॥
How is the six-fold support? It is said to be the six tastes [of food]: sweet, acid,
salty, pungent, bitter, and astringent. And ¬adja, Ŭabha, gāndhāra, pancama,
madhyama, dhaivata, ni¬āda, together with agreeable and disagreeable sounds
and prayer, make ten categories.
It has white, red, black, smoky gray, yellow, tawny and pale as the colours. What
are the seven dhātus (tissues) when Devadatta (any person) desires enjoyment of
objects? From the proper combination of qualities, six types of taste (rasa)
emerge. From relish of food, blood is created, from it flesh, thence fat, bones,
marrow, semen. By the combination of semen and blood the embryo (garbha) is
born, and its growth is regulated by the heart (mother’s heartbeat as well as the
embryo’s).
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[The seven dhātus] are in the heart where there’s inner fire; at the place of the fire
is pitta (bile); at the pitta-organs is movement (vāyu); and at the vāyu-place is the
heart, all growing in order according to the law (Prajāpati).
When ready, on the joining [of the male and female], [the embryo] after [a day]
and night is in a mixed (semi-fluid) state; after seven days it becomes a bubble;
after a fortnight, a solid mass, and in a month, it hardens. In two months, it
develops the head; in three months, the feet grow.
In the fourth month, belly and hip are formed; in the fifth month, the backbone is
formed; in the sixth month, nose, eyes and ears are formed.
If the father’s seed is more potent, it becomes male; if the mother’s seed is
stronger, it becomes female. If the seeds are equal, it becomes an intersexual
(napu÷saka, neither male, nor female).
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प चा मकः समथर्ः
प चा मकतेजसे रस स य ानात ् यानात ्
अ रमो कारं िच तयित ।
तदे तदे का रं ा वाऽ ौ
ूकृ तयः षोडश वकाराः शर रे तःयैवे दे हनाम ् ।
Enabled by the five-fold self, the intelligence of the five elements emerges, and he
meditates on the imperishable syllable Om. With the knowledge of the syllable,
he understands the eight natures [five sense organs, the mind, intellect and ego]
and their sixteen modifications belong to the self residing in the body.
Whatever is consumed or drunk by the mother passes through the nerves and
vessels to the child, becoming the source of his satisfaction. During the ninth
month, all outer signs attain completeness. And he is reminded of his previous
birth, and recounts the good and bad deeds committed.
He thinks: I have seen thousands of wombs, eaten several kinds of food and
sucked many breasts. Born and dead again and again, I am immersed in grief but
see no remedy. Thinking of my good and bad deeds, I am suffering alone,
although the bodies that enjoyed the fruits are gone.
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अशुभ यकतार्रं फलमु ूदायकम ् ॥
When I get out of this womb, I will take refuge in Sā¡khya-Yoga, which destroys
misery and yields liberation; when I get out of this womb, I will take refuge in
Maheśvara, who destroys misery and grants liberation.
When I get out of this womb, I will take refuge in Nārāyaªa, who destroys misery
and grants liberation. When I get out of this womb, I will meditate on the eternal
Brahman.
When he reaches the birth canal and comes out of it with great difficulty, he is
touched by an all-pervading movement [Māyā] that causes him to forget previous
births and the good and the bad deeds performed therein.
शर रिमित कःमात ्
सा ाद नयो ऽ िौय ते ाना नदर् शन
र् ा नः को ा न रित ।
तऽ को ा ननार्मािशतपीतले चोंयं पचतीित ।
दशर्ना नी पाद नां दशर्नं करोित ।
ाना नः शुभाशुभं च कमर् व दित ।
Why the body is called śarīram. It has three fires – namely, jñānāgni, darśanāgni
and ko¬−hāgni. Of these, ko¬−hāgni is that fire which enables the digestion of all
that is eaten; darśanāgni is the fire that gives the power of seeing forms; jñānāgni
is that fire of knowledge which enables one to distinguish between good and bad
actions.
तऽ ऽी ण ःथानािन भव त
दये द णा न दरे गाहर् प यं
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मुखमाहवनीयमा मा यजमानो
मनो ॄ ा लोभादयः पशवो धृितद ा स तोष
बु िया ण य पाऽा ण कम िया ण हवीं ष िशरः
कपालं केशा दभार् मुखम तव दः चतुंकपालं
िशरः षोडश पा द
र् तो पटलािन ।
They have three places. At the heart is the dak¬iªāgni, in the belly is the
gārhapatya, in the mouth is the āhavanīya. Ātman is the yajamāna (sacrificer);
the mind is the Brahmā (the doer); greed and so on [anger, jealousy] are animals
[of sacrifice]; mental strength is the vow; contentment and the organs of intellect
are the instruments of the yajña (sacrifice); the action organs are the sacrificial
objects (comparable to the havis or the rice); the head or the skull is the utensil;
the hair thereon is the darbha (the dried grass used in homa); the mouth is the
inner altar, the head are the four cups, and the two rows of teeth are the sixteen
cups (kapāla) [of the sacrifice].
[The human body] consists of 107 marmas (weak or sensitive spots), 180 sutures
or junction points, 109 snāyu (sinews), 700 channels, 500 majjā (muscle), 360
bones, and forty five million hairs. The heart weighs 8 palas and the tongue
weights 12 palas. It has one prastha of pitta (bile), one ā©haka of kapha, one
ku©ava of śukra, and two prasthas of fat. The measure of the urinary or solid
excretions is dependent on the intake. [1 pala = 45.5 grammes; 1 prastham = 728
grammes; 1 ā©hakam = 2,912 grammes; 1 ku©avam = 182 grammes]
पै पलादं मो शा ं
प रसमा ं पै पलादं मो शा ं प रसमा िमित ॥
This Mok¬a ˜āstra was enunciated by the sage Pippalāda. This Mok¬a ˜āstra was
enunciated by the sage Pippalāda.
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Notes
The first question concerns the date of the Garbha Upani¬ad. Since it is ascribed
to Pippalāda, we need to determine this sage’s place in the Vedic tradition,
although it is believed that the text may not be as old as the sage. Pippalāda is also
the instructing sage of the Praśna Upani¬ad and the author of the Atharvaveda
śākhā named after him (Paippalāda śākhā). As a principal arranger of the
Atharvaveda, he should be assigned to at least the middle of the second
millennium BCE, if the ›gveda is to be taken to be no later than 2000 BCE, as is
suggested by hydrological evidence related to the drying up of the Sarasvatī river
around this time, and the fact that the ›gveda celebrates this river as the great
river of its time, flowing from the mountains to the sea.
According to the Purāªas, Pippalāda was the disciple of the ›¬i Vedasparśa, and
he instructed Yudhi¬−hira in the significance of the A¡gāravrata, which is based
on a dialogue between ˜ukra and Virocana.
2. Recursion
Recursion, the mirroring of the cosmos at several levels, including at the level of
the body, is one of the central ideas of the Upani¬ads. It is clearly stated, for
example, in the Chāndogya Up. 8.1.1 and 3, where we are told that within the
heart is this small place with the heaven, earth, sun, moon, and stars where the
lights of the universe shine.
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यावा वा अयमाकाशःतावानेषोऽ त र् दय आकाश
उभे अ ःम ावापृिथवी अ तरे व समा हते
उभाव न वायु सूयार्च िमसावुभौ
व ु न ऽा ण य चाःयेहा ःत य च ना ःत सव
तद ःम समा हतिमित ॥ छा दो योपिनषद् ८. १. ३ ॥
There is in this city of Brahman (the body) the mansion in the shape of a
lotus and in it the small inner ākāśa (sky). What lies there that should be
sought, which one should seek to understand?’
As large indeed as is this ākāśa, so large is that ākāśa in the heart. Within it
are contained both heaven and earth, both fire and air, both sun and moon,
lightning and stars; whatever there is of him (Self) in this world and whatever
is not, all that is contained within it. (Chandogya Up. 8.1.1 and 8.1.3)
This recursion is also expressed across time, and it leads to a variety of paradoxes
that, the Vedas tell us, cannot be explained away by language. It is described most
clearly in the last (fifth) section of the Garbha Upani¬ad in which the body itself is
seen as the ground of the sacrifice.
Speaking of recursion, one must also mention “hiraªyagarbha,” the golden womb
out of which, the Veda tells us, the universe emerged. In an abstract sense,
creation at the cosmic level is to be understood in a sense similar to that at the
individual level.
Now we consider the most interesting assertion that the body consists of 107
marmas (weak spots), 180 sutures or junction points, 109 snāyu (sinews), 700
veins, 500 majjā (muscle), 360 bones, and forty five million hairs.
The numbers 180 and 360 are obviously astronomical and related to the number
of days in the civil year. Their occurrence is the assertion of the mirroring of the
cosmos in the body.
The numbers 107 and 109 are also, but less obviously, astronomically related. I
have shown elsewhere (see the references below) that the Vedic Ŭis characterized
the universe by the measure of 108, for it represents the distance to the sun and
the moon from the earth, in multiples of their respective diameters. If the body
mirrors the universe, it will have 108 parts, with 107 vulnerable joints (marmas),
and 109 lashes to hold them together (snāyu).
Other Upani¬ads (e.g. Aitareya 3.3) speak of four kinds of life: born alive, born
from egg, born from moisture (insects), and born from germ (plants).
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बीजानीतरा ण चेतरा ण चा डजािन च जा जािन च ःवेदजािन चो जािन चा ा गावः पु षा
ह ःतनो य क चेदं ूा ण ज गमं च पत ऽ च य च ःथावरं सव त ू ानेऽं ू ाने ूित तं
ू ानेऽो लोकः ू ा ूित ा ू ानं ॄ ॥ ऐतरे य उपिनषत ् ३.॥
[These all] are born of eggs, of wombs, of moisture, and of sprouts, namely
horses, cattle, men, elephants, and all creatures that there are that move or fly
and those that do not move. All these are guided by consciousness and
supported by consciousness; the basis is consciousness. Consciousness is
Brahman. (Aitareya Up. 3.3)
Consciousness is not taken to exist only in the human, but in all life.
The count of 700 channels does not go to the usual details that are to be found in
other Upani¬ads. Thus Pippalāda instructs ¸ślavāyana in Praśna Upani¬ad 3.6:
This means that the total number of channels (veins, nerves) equals:
BÅhadāraªyaka Upani¬ad 2.1.19 speaks of how the Self returns to the body along
the 72,000 hitā channels, which branch off from the heart to all parts of the body.
This together with a further description of these nerves of four colours is
described well in the Kau¬ītaki Brāhmaªa Upani¬ad:
हता नाम दयःय ना यो दया पुर ततमिभूत व त यथा सहॐधा केशो वपा टतःतावद यः
प गलःया ण ना ित त। शु लःय कृ ंणःय पीतःय लो हतःयेित तासु तदा भवित। यदा सु ः
ःव नं न कंचन पँय यथा ःम ूाण एवैकधा भवित तथैनं वा सवनार्मिभः सहा येित मनः
सव यार्तैः सहा येित च ुः सव पैः सहा येित ौोऽं सवः श दै ः सहा येित मनः सव यार्तैः सहा येित
स यदा ूितबु यते यथा ने वर्लतो वःफुिल गा वूित ेर नेवमेवैतःमादा मनः ूाणा यथायतनं
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वूित ते ूाणे यो दे वा दे वे यो लोकाःत था ुरः ुर याने हतः ःया भ
ं रो वा व ंभरकुलाय
एवमेवैष ूा आ मेदं शर रमनुू व आ लोम य आ नखे यः ॥ ४. १९. ॥
The nerves of the heart named hitā extend from the heart of the person
towards the surrounding body. Fine as a hair divided a thousand-fold, they
stand full of thin essence of various colours, white, black, yellow, and red. In
these one remains when sleeping and sees no dream, becoming one with the
prāªa alone. Then speech with all names goes to it, the eye with all forms
goes to it, the ear with all sounds goes to it, and the mind with all thoughts
goes to it. And when he awakes, then as from a blazing fire sparks proceed in
all directions, thus from that self the prāªas proceed, each towards its place,
from the prāªas the gods (the senses), from the gods the worlds. And as a
razor might be placed in a razor-case, or as fire in the fire-place, even so this
conscious self enters the body to the very hairs and nails.
On that self depend other selves, as the men follow the chief, or as his own
people are of service to the chief, even so these other selves are of service to
that self. So long Indra did not understand this self, the Asuras defeated him.
When he understood this, striking down and conquering the Asuras, he
attained pre-eminence among all gods and all beings, sovereignty and
supremacy. And thus also he who knows this obtains pre-eminence among all
beings, sovereignty, supremacy - he who knows this, yes, he who knows
this. (Kau¬ītaki Brāhmaªa Upani¬ad 4.19-20)
In Section 4, the Upani¬ad speaks of how the newborn forgets the causal chain at
the moment of birth. This echoes the Bhagavad Gītā:
By the rising together of desire and envy by the confusion of duality, all
beings, when born, fall into the state of forgetting. (Bhagavad Gītā 7.27)
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By doing this, it is able to fit the individual’s embodiment in the womb that is
consistent with the idea of rebirth.
6. General views
Like other sages of the Upani¬ads, Pippalāda is systematic and rational. The
physical basis of life, and the sequence following the development of the embryo,
is clearly defined. He describes the basis of life mystically in categories that go, in
sequence, from 2 to 7. In the body emerge 8 natures and in it arise 16
modifications that are similar to the tattvas of Sā¡khya. In Praśna Upani¬ad 6.4,
these are listed by Pippalāda.
The embryo is taken to have become jīva (conscious self) in the seventh month,
and in the eighth month, it becomes complete in every sense. This gives the time
the fetus becomes a person, with attendant legal rights. It is not explained how the
jīva comes to be attached to the body.
Although other passages indicate that the jīva resides in the heart’s recess, it also
suffuses the entire body; furthermore, its identity with the Puru¬a means that,
mysteriously, it is the one with the entire universe. The distinction also implies
the existence of the subtle body (li¡gam). In the Sarvasāra Upani¬ad 7, the subtle
body is defined as created out of the mind and other subtle elements that reside in
the knot of the heart. The consciousness within this subtle body is called the
“knower of the field” (k¬etrajña).
The body is an instrument of the heart, but for it to be able to do what it can, the
k¬etrajña must be free: this is mok¬a or mukti.
7. Mass ratios
The conversion ratios in the last section of the Upani¬ad are from Paul Deussen’s
book The Philosophy of the Upanishads (Dover, 1966, page 285).
References
S. Kak, The axis and the perimeter of the Hindu temple. Mankind Quarterly, vol.
46, 2006.
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