Vānaprastha-Dharma: Forest Discipline, Vaikhānasa Austerities, and Śiva-Āśrama as the Liberative Refuge
पञ्चाग्निर्धूमपो वा स्यादुष्मपः सोमपो ऽपि वा / पयः पिबेच्छुक्लपक्षे कृष्णापक्षे तु गोमयम् / शीर्णपर्णाशनो वा स्यात् कृच्छ्रैर् वा वर्तयेत् सदा
pañcāgnirdhūmapo vā syāduṣmapaḥ somapo 'pi vā / payaḥ pibecchuklapakṣe kṛṣṇāpakṣe tu gomayam / śīrṇaparṇāśano vā syāt kṛcchrair vā vartayet sadā
قد يلتزم بنسك «الخمسة نيران» (pañcāgni)، أو يعيش بـ«شرب الدخان»، أو بـ«شرب البخار الحار»، أو حتى بالاكتفاء بالسُّوما (soma). في النصف المضيء من الشهر القمري (śukla pakṣa) فليشرب اللبن؛ أمّا في النصف المظلم (kṛṣṇa pakṣa) فليتناول روث البقر. أو ليقتات بأوراقٍ ساقطةٍ ذابلة؛ وهكذا فليداوم على معيشته بصرامة رياضات الكِرِتشْرا (kṛcchra) الكفّارية.
Lord Kūrma (Viṣṇu) instructing on dharma and tapas
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: raudra
Indirectly: it emphasizes purification through restraint and tapas, preparing the practitioner’s body-mind for steadiness and insight, which the Purāṇa elsewhere links to realizing the Self beyond impurities.
It highlights ascetic disciplines (tapas) and kṛcchra-type observances—regulated diet and endurance-based vows—which function as foundational yama/niyama-style practices supporting concentration and higher contemplative yoga.
By presenting tapas and purity as universal dharmic means rather than sectarian markers, it supports the Kurma Purana’s broader Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis: the same disciplines serve devotion and realization oriented to either Śiva or Viṣṇu as the one supreme.