Prāyaścitta for Mahāpātakas — Brahmahatyā, Association with the Fallen, and Tīrtha-Based Purification
एककालं चरेद् भैक्षं दोषं विख्यापयन् नृणाम् / वन्यमूलफलैर्वापि वर्तयेद् धैर्यमाक्षितः
ekakālaṃ cared bhaikṣaṃ doṣaṃ vikhyāpayan nṛṇām / vanyamūlaphalairvāpi vartayed dhairyamākṣitaḥ
ليطلب الصدقة مرةً واحدةً في اليوم، وهو يعلن للناس علنًا خطأه؛ أو ليقتات بجذور الغابة وثمارها فيستبقي حياته—ثابتًا لا تتزعزع عزيمته ولا صبره.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing on dharma and disciplined renunciant conduct
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
By emphasizing endurance and independence from comforts, it points to inward stability: the seeker should rest in unshaken steadiness rather than external supports—an ethical foundation for realizing the Self beyond need and fear.
It highlights tapas (austerity), niyama-like discipline (regulated intake—begging once daily), humility, and dhṛti (steadfastness). Such restraint supports meditative stability central to Kurma Purana’s yogic-dharma framework.
Indirectly, it reflects the Purana’s shared Shaiva-Vaishnava ethic: the ideal practitioner cultivates tapas, humility, and steadiness—virtues praised across both Pashupata-oriented and Vishnu-taught dharma instructions.