Vānaprastha-Dharma: Forest Discipline, Vaikhānasa Austerities, and Śiva-Āśrama as the Liberative Refuge
देवताभ्यश्च तद् हुत्वा वन्यं मेध्यतरं हविः / शेषं समुपभुञ्जीत लवणं च स्वयं कृतम्
devatābhyaśca tad hutvā vanyaṃ medhyataraṃ haviḥ / śeṣaṃ samupabhuñjīta lavaṇaṃ ca svayaṃ kṛtam
بعد أن يقدّم تلك القرابين للآلهة، فليتخذ طعام القربان مما ينبت في الغابة وهو أشدّ تطهيرًا؛ ثم ليأكل ما بقي، مع ملحٍ يصنعه بيده.
Traditional narrator in a dharma-instruction passage (Kurma Purana’s prescriptive voice)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
Indirectly: by insisting on offering first and then consuming the purified remainder (śeṣa), the verse supports the Kurma Purana’s ethic of self-restraint and consecration—disciplines that purify the mind, making it fit to recognize the Atman beyond appetite and ego.
Āhāra-śuddhi (purity of intake) and yajña-śeṣa-bhojana (eating only what remains after offering) are emphasized as practical tapas supporting steadiness of mind—an auxiliary discipline aligned with the Purana’s broader yoga-ethics, including Pāśupata-oriented restraint and purity.
Not explicitly in wording; however, the shared dharma of consecrated offering and purified living is presented as a common spiritual foundation across Shaiva and Vaishnava paths in the Kurma Purana’s synthesis.