Brahmacārin-Dharma: Guru-Sevā, Daily Vedic Study, Gāyatrī-Japa, and Anadhyāya Regulations
आसने शयने याने नैव तिष्ठेत् कदाचन / धावन्तमनुधावेत गच्छन्तमनुगच्छति
āsane śayane yāne naiva tiṣṭhet kadācana / dhāvantamanudhāveta gacchantamanugacchati
إذا كان الموقَّر جالسًا أو مضطجعًا أو راكبًا، فلا يقف المرء قائمًا أبدًا. إن ركض ركضتَ خلفه، وإن مشى مشيتَ معه ملازمًا خطاه.
Traditional narrator (Purāṇic instruction on sadācāra, framed as dharma-teaching within the Kurma Purana’s discourse)
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Indirectly: it teaches humility and self-restraint, which purify the mind (antaḥkaraṇa). Such purification is a prerequisite for Atman-realization taught elsewhere in the Kurma Purana’s higher spiritual sections.
It emphasizes discipline akin to yama/niyama—respect, attentiveness, and surrender in service (sevā). This ethical training stabilizes the practitioner for mantra, meditation, and Shaiva–Vaishnava devotional Yoga emphasized in the text.
Not explicitly; it supports the Kurma Purana’s synthesis by grounding devotion and spiritual practice in dharmic conduct—an ethical foundation shared by both Shaiva and Vaishnava paths.