The Exposition of the Dvādaśī Vow for the Twelve Months
Dvādaśī-vrata-nirṇaya and Mahā-dvādaśī Lakṣaṇas
व्रती द्विजाय तत्पश्चादेकभक्तं समाचरेत् । व्रतेनानेन संतुष्टो देवदेवस्त्रिविक्रमः ॥ १८ ॥
vratī dvijāya tatpaścādekabhaktaṃ samācaret | vratenānena saṃtuṣṭo devadevastrivikramaḥ || 18 ||
Danach soll der Gelübdehalter Ekabhakta üben, also nur einmal am Tag essen, und dem Dvija (Brahmanen) das Gebührende darbringen. Durch dieses Gelübde wird Trivikrama, der Gott der Götter, erfreut.
Narada
Vrata: Dvādaśī-vrata (Trivikrama-focused; continuation/conclusion step)
Primary Rasa: bhakti
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It teaches that disciplined vrata-practice—especially restraint in food and honoring the dvija—directly pleases Viṣṇu as Trivikrama, showing that devotion is strengthened through regulated living and dharmic giving.
Bhakti here is expressed as practical devotion: adopting ekabhakta (one meal a day) as a vow-discipline and supporting a brāhmaṇa, indicating that sincere austerity and reverence are offerings that satisfy the Lord.
Ritual discipline (kalpa-oriented vrata procedure) is implied: the regulated observance of ekabhakta and the prescribed act of giving/serving a dvija as part of a vow’s proper performance.