Brahmacārin-Dharma: Guru-Sevā, Daily Vedic Study, Gāyatrī-Japa, and Anadhyāya Regulations
उत्सृज्य ग्रामनगरं मासान् विप्रोर्ऽद्धपञ्चमान् / अधीयीत शुचौ देशे ब्रह्मचारी समाहितः
utsṛjya grāmanagaraṃ māsān vipror'ddhapañcamān / adhīyīta śucau deśe brahmacārī samāhitaḥ
Habiendo dejado la vida de aldea y ciudad durante cuatro meses y medio, el estudiante brāhmaṇa, establecido en brahmacarya, autocontrolado y sereno, debe estudiar el Veda en un lugar puro y apartado.
Traditional narration in the Kurma Purana (didactic instruction attributed to the Purana’s teaching voice, commonly framed as Lord Kurma’s discourse to sages/seekers)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Indirectly: by prescribing mental collectedness (samāhita) and purity (śuci) as prerequisites for Vedic study, it points to the Atman as realized through disciplined inner steadiness rather than social distraction.
Foundational sādhanā: withdrawal from distracting environments (seclusion), śauca (purity), brahmacarya (continence), and samādhāna/samāhitatva (one-pointed composure)—ethical and mental disciplines that support later yogic absorption.
It does not name Shiva or Vishnu explicitly; it supports the Kurma Purana’s synthesis by grounding higher Shaiva-Vaishnava yoga-theology in shared dharmic prerequisites—purity, restraint, and focused study.