When the vulture sits upon the spine,
a shadow falls along the limb,
a slow, dragging ache,
a pull that whispers hidden pain.
Gridhrasi, the sages named it so,
for pain that clings as tightly
as a bird that never lets go.
Inside the silent corridors of the body,
Vata wanders with a restless wind,
cracking the pathways,
drying the joints,
sending shivers through nerves
that once sang softly.
Sometimes Kapha thickens the way,
a heavy mist slowing every step,
holding the wind captive
in cold, stubborn knots.
The leg becomes a lonely road,
each movement a memory
of freedom forgotten.
Yet somewhere in the quiet of November nights,
a small white flower blooms,
Sephali, the Night Jasmine.
It wakes when the world sleeps,
drops its petals like fallen moons,
but saves its healing
in the green veins of its leaves.
They warm the fire that has dimmed,
they clear the channels where pain sits thick,
they whisper to Vata, “Flow gently”,
and to Kapha, “Release your hold”.
The decoction rises like dawn in the body,
slow and golden,
loosening the vulture’s claws.
nerves remember ease,
muscles uncoil from their fear.
What felt like captivity
turns to quiet relief.
For healing is not a battle,
it is a returning, a remembering.
A meeting of leaf and limb,
nature and nerve, science and soul.
And when Sephalipatra sings inside the blood,
the vulture lifts at last,
its wings no longer heavy with pain,
and flies away, into the morning.
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