Brahmin Right Conduct: Morning Remembrance, Bathing, Purification, and Tarpaṇa Method
अश्वत्थामा बलिर्व्यासो हनूमांश्च विभीषणः । कृपः परशुरामश्च सप्तैते चीरजीविनः
aśvatthāmā balirvyāso hanūmāṃśca vibhīṣaṇaḥ | kṛpaḥ paraśurāmaśca saptaite cīrajīvinaḥ
Aśvatthāmā, Bali, Vyāsa, Hanumān, Vibhīṣaṇa, Kṛpa y Paraśurāma: estos siete son los de larga vida, los inmortales.
Not specified in the provided excerpt (context-dependent within Padma Purana, Sṛṣṭikhaṇḍa 49)
Concept: Certain beings endure across yugas as living witnesses of dharma and adharma; remembering them evokes vigilance, humility, and hope.
Application: Use the cirajīvin remembrance as a daily check: choose one quality—devotion (Hanumān), righteous counsel (Vibhīṣaṇa), scriptural study (Vyāsa), restraint after error (Aśvatthāmā as cautionary).
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"Seven cirajīvins stand in a semicircle like guardians of time: Hanumān radiant with folded hands, Vibhīṣaṇa in royal humility, Vyāsa with palm-leaf manuscripts, Paraśurāma with axe, Bali with a crown and a gesture of charity, Kṛpa as a calm warrior-sage, and Aśvatthāmā shadowed yet penitent. Behind them, a yuga-wheel turns in the sky, suggesting their witness across ages.","primary_figures":["Aśvatthāmā","Bali","Vyāsa","Hanumān","Vibhīṣaṇa","Kṛpa","Paraśurāma"],"setting":"A liminal sacred landscape blending forest hermitage, battlefield horizon, and a celestial backdrop with a rotating kāla-cakra (wheel of time).","lighting_mood":"moonlit","color_palette":["midnight blue","smoky gray","saffron","copper","pale gold"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: seven iconic figures arranged symmetrically with gold-leaf halos; Hanumān in saffron with jeweled ornaments, Vyāsa with manuscripts, Paraśurāma with axe, Bali in regal attire, Vibhīṣaṇa with folded hands, Kṛpa with bow, Aśvatthāmā with subdued expression; embossed gold borders, rich reds/greens, gem-like detailing, a stylized time-wheel behind them.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: elegant grouping in a twilight forest clearing; each cirajīvin rendered with delicate facial nuance—Hanumān devotional, Aśvatthāmā brooding, Vyāsa contemplative; soft moonlight, cool palette, fine textile patterns, distant mountains and a faint celestial wheel motif.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines and saturated pigments; seven figures in iconic frontal poses with characteristic large eyes; rhythmic ornamental background with a circular kāla-cakra; red/yellow/green palette with black contouring and temple-wall symmetry.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: ornate floral border with small medallions; central Hanumān as devotional focus, other cirajīvins in surrounding panels; deep indigo ground, gold highlights, intricate motifs, symmetrical sacred hanging aesthetic."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Durga","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["low drum (mridangam)","conch shell (soft)","wind through trees","distant thunder","brief silence after the list"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: बलिर्व्यासो = बलिः + व्यासः (visarga sandhi); हनूमांश्च = हनूमान् + च; सप्तैते = सप्त + एते.
They are Ashvatthama, King Bali, Vyasa, Hanuman, Vibhishana, Kripa, and Parashurama—figures described in tradition as exceptionally long-lived and continuing into the present age.
Literally it means “long-lived” (cira = long time, jīvin = living). In many Hindu traditions it functions practically as “immortal,” meaning they endure through vast ages (yugas) by divine boon or destiny.
The list preserves exemplars associated with dharma, devotion, and responsibility—reminding readers that sacred history is not merely past: virtue, devotion, and divine purpose are portrayed as enduring across time.