Svāyambhuva Lineage to Dakṣa; Pṛthu’s Devotion; Pāśupata Saṃnyāsa; Dakṣa–Satī Episode
तत्र मन्दाकिनी नाम सुपुण्या विमला नदी / पद्मोत्पलवनोपेता सिद्धाश्रमविभूषिता
tatra mandākinī nāma supuṇyā vimalā nadī / padmotpalavanopetā siddhāśramavibhūṣitā
ત્યાં ‘મંદાકિની’ નામની અતિ પુણ્યદાયિની, નિર્મળ નદી છે; તે પદ્મ અને ઉત્પલના વનો વડે યુક્ત અને સિદ્ધોના આશ્રમોથી શોભિત છે.
Sūta (narrator) describing the tīrtha-landscape to the assembled sages
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Indirectly: by emphasizing purity (vimala) and sacred presence, it points to the Purāṇic idea that tīrthas and siddha-āśramas aid inner purification, making the mind fit to recognize the stainless Self (ātman) taught elsewhere in the Kurma Purana.
No technique is named, but the setting—siddha hermitages by a pure river—signals a yogic ecosystem: seclusion (āśrama), sādhus/siddhas, and tīrtha-snāna as supports for tapas, japa, dhyāna, and the Pashupata-oriented disciplines elaborated in other sections.
It does so implicitly through shared sacred space: the tīrtha landscape is presented as universally sanctifying, consistent with the Kurma Purana’s Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis where holy places and siddha traditions support devotion and realization beyond sectarian division.