Saṅkara-jāti-nirṇaya and Gṛhastha-ācāra: Daily Rites, Purity, Anadhyāya, and Food Discipline
स्वाध्यायमन्वहं कुर्यान्न पचेच्चान्नमात्मने / बालस्ववासिनीवृद्धगर्भिण्यातुरकन्यकाः
svādhyāyamanvahaṃ kuryānna paceccānnamātmane / bālasvavāsinīvṛddhagarbhiṇyāturakanyakāḥ
ينبغي أن يُداوم المرء كلَّ يوم على السڤادهيايا (التلاوة والدراسة المقدّسة)، وألا يطبخ الطعام لنفسه وحده. بل يُشرك فيه الأطفال، ومن يعولهم في البيت، والشيوخ، والحوامل، والمرضى، والفتيات غير المتزوّجات.
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Svadhyaya and anna-sharing as obligatory daily conduct; food is not for solitary enjoyment but for sustaining dependents and those in need.
Vedantic Theme: Karma-yoga orientation: offering and sharing reduce ahankara/mamakara and purify the mind (antahkarana-shuddhi).
Application: Keep a daily study/recitation practice; cook with an intention to share; ensure portions for children, elders, pregnant women, the sick, and unmarried daughters/wards before personal consumption.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Type: household (griha)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.96.16-19 (sequence on bhojana-vidhi, atithi-seva, apośana)
This verse presents svādhyāya as a daily discipline that sustains dharma and strengthens right conduct alongside compassionate living.
By discouraging cooking only for oneself and encouraging feeding the vulnerable, it emphasizes anna-dāna and care for dependents as merit-producing actions aligned with dharma.
Maintain a daily study/recitation habit and ensure meals include sharing—supporting children, elders, pregnant women, the sick, and those under your care before personal indulgence.