Karma-yoga Discipline for the Twice-born: Upanayana, Upavīta Conduct, Guru-veneration, and Alms-regimen
समाहृत्य तु तद् भैक्षं यावदर्थममायया / भुञ्जीत प्रयतो नित्यं वाग्यतो ऽनन्यमानसः
samāhṛtya tu tad bhaikṣaṃ yāvadarthamamāyayā / bhuñjīta prayato nityaṃ vāgyato 'nanyamānasaḥ
Ayant rassemblé cette nourriture d’aumône, sans tromperie et seulement selon le besoin, qu’il la prenne chaque jour dans la pureté, maîtrisant la parole et tenant l’esprit fixé sur nul autre que le Seigneur Suprême.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing on dharma and yogic discipline
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
By prescribing “ananya-mānasaḥ” (single-mindedness), the verse points to steadiness in the Supreme (Ishvara/Atman) as the inner orientation that purifies even basic acts like eating.
It emphasizes yama-niyama style disciplines: non-deceit (amāyā), moderation in food (yāvad-artha), purity and vigilance (prayata), restraint of speech (vāg-yata), and one-pointed mind (ananya-manas) supportive of Pashupata-oriented practice.
While Vishnu (as Lord Kurma) speaks, the ethic of single-minded devotion and disciplined renunciation aligns with the Purana’s Shaiva-Vaishnava synthesis—one Supreme approached through yogic restraint, beyond sectarian division.