Brahmacārin-Dharma: Guru-Sevā, Daily Vedic Study, Gāyatrī-Japa, and Anadhyāya Regulations
उपाकर्मणि चोत्सर्गे त्रिरात्रं क्षपणं स्मृतम् / अष्टकासु त्वहोरात्रं ऋत्वन्त्यासु च रात्रिषु
upākarmaṇi cotsarge trirātraṃ kṣapaṇaṃ smṛtam / aṣṭakāsu tvahorātraṃ ṛtvantyāsu ca rātriṣu
Für die Riten des Upākarman und des Utsarga ist eine Sühne- und Läuterungsübung (kṣapaṇa) von drei Nächten vorgeschrieben. An den Aṣṭakā-Tagen ist sie einen ganzen Tag und eine ganze Nacht zu halten; ebenso in den abschließenden Nächten der Jahreszeiten soll sie in jenen Nächten beobachtet werden.
Vyāsa (narrating dharma-teachings to the sages in Purāṇic discourse)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Indirectly: it emphasizes disciplined purification (śauca/prāyaścitta) as a dharmic foundation that steadies the mind, making it fit for higher knowledge of the Self taught elsewhere in the Kurma Purana.
Not a meditation technique directly, but a preparatory discipline: regulated fasting/expiation (kṣapaṇa) tied to Vedic observances, supporting self-control (saṃyama) that complements Pāśupata-oriented sādhanā described in other sections.
By placing strict dharma and purification at the center of spiritual life, it reflects the Purāṇa’s integrative ethos: the same disciplined conduct undergirds both Vaiṣṇava and Śaiva paths, later harmonized in its Shiva–Vishnu unity teachings.