सायंप्रातर्मनुष्पयाणामशन देवनिर्मितम् । नान्तरा भोजन दृष्टमुपवासविधिहिं स:
sāyaṃprātar manuṣyāṇām aśanaṃ devanirmitam | nāntarā bhojanaṃ dṛṣṭam upavāsavidhir hi saḥ |
Bhishma said: For human beings, the gods have ordained eating at only two times—morning and evening. No rule is seen for taking food in between. By observing this restraint, one gains the merit of a fast. And within this ethical order, the disciplined householder should be a protector and welcomer of all—guests, servants, one’s own kin, and those who seek refuge—so that personal self-control upholds social responsibility.
भीष्म उवाच
Maintain disciplined eating—only morning and evening meals, avoiding food in between—so that restraint itself yields the merit associated with fasting; this personal discipline is aligned with the broader dharma of supporting and welcoming others (guests, dependents, kin, and refugees).
In Bhishma’s instruction on dharma (Anushasana Parva), he lays down a normative rule of conduct for householders: regulated meal-times as divinely ordained, and the ethical expectation that one’s life be oriented toward protection and hospitality for those connected to or dependent on the householder.