The Caturmasya Observances and the Rite of Vishnu’s Sleep (Aśūnya-Śayana) and Shiva’s Monthly Vows
ततस्तु फाल्गुने मासिं कृष्णाष्टम्यां यतव्रत उपवासं समुदीतं कर्तव्यं द्विजसत्तम
tatastu phālgune māsiṃ kṛṣṇāṣṭamyāṃ yatavrata upavāsaṃ samudītaṃ kartavyaṃ dvijasattama
Luego, en el mes de Phālguna, en el octavo día lunar de la quincena oscura (Kṛṣṇāṣṭamī), oh el mejor de los nacidos dos veces, quien se mantiene firme en sus votos debe emprender el ayuno prescrito (upavāsa).
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Time-discipline is spiritual discipline: aligning practice with sacred calendrics (māsa/tithi) trains steadiness (niyama) and makes devotion rhythmic rather than sporadic.
Like other vrata passages, it belongs to dharma-oriented purāṇic teaching; it is not a cosmogonic or genealogical unit but a prescriptive ritual calendar instruction.
Kṛṣṇāṣṭamī (waning phase) often connotes inward turning and austerity; fasting here symbolizes voluntary ‘emptying’ to receive grace, preparing the devotee for the concluding rites described nearby.