Viṣṇu as Seed-Cause: Pañcarātra Emanations, Tattva-Unfolding, and the Avatāra Chronology
अनन्यसाध्यं ब्रह्मचर्यं च कर्तुं दशेन्द्रियाणां शोषणार्थं सदैव / सनन्दनादौ पठितः कुमारस्तस्मान्नान्यो नात्र विचार्यमस्ति
ananyasādhyaṃ brahmacaryaṃ ca kartuṃ daśendriyāṇāṃ śoṣaṇārthaṃ sadaiva / sanandanādau paṭhitaḥ kumārastasmānnānyo nātra vicāryamasti
Para cumplir el brahmacarya—algo que no puede lograrse por otro medio—debe emprenderse siempre el secamiento (debilitamiento) de los diez sentidos. Esta disciplina la enseñan los Kumāras, comenzando por Sanandana; por ello, aquí no hay otra alternativa que considerar.
Lord Vishnu (teaching Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Brahmacarya is secured by systematic attenuation of the ten senses (five jnanendriyas + five karmendriyas); no alternative method supersedes sense-restraint.
Vedantic Theme: Indriya-nigraha as prerequisite for śama-dama and steady mind leading to knowledge/realization; mastery over vrittis as doorway to liberation.
Application: Adopt daily sense-discipline: regulated diet and media, guarded speech, mindful routines, celibacy/continence as per capacity, and consistent meditation to weaken compulsive sensory pull.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Type: ashrama/teaching lineage (symbolic)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: teachings on sadachara, brahmacarya, and indriya-nigraha (general thematic parallel)
This verse presents brahmacarya as a uniquely effective discipline, stating it is accomplished through sustained weakening of the ten senses, as taught by the Kumāras.
It emphasizes that spiritual steadiness comes from indriya-nigraha (sense-restraint): by reducing the force of sensory impulses, one becomes fit for higher knowledge and liberation-oriented living.
Practice daily sense-discipline—moderate food, speech, and sexual impulse; reduce overstimulation; and keep consistent vows or routines that train the mind to not chase sense-objects.