Brahmacārin-Dharma: Guru-Sevā, Daily Vedic Study, Gāyatrī-Japa, and Anadhyāya Regulations
अनध्यायस्तु नाङ्गेषु नेतिहासपुराणयोः / न धर्मशास्त्रेष्वन्येषु पर्वण्येतानि वर्जयेत्
anadhyāyastu nāṅgeṣu netihāsapurāṇayoḥ / na dharmaśāstreṣvanyeṣu parvaṇyetāni varjayet
Larangan belajar (anadhyāya) tidak berlaku bagi Vedāṅga, juga tidak bagi Itihāsa dan Purāṇa, maupun bagi Dharma-śāstra lainnya; bahkan pada hari parvan pun jangan meninggalkan bacaan-bacaan ini.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing the sages (Kurma Purana discourse frame)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Indirectly: it prioritizes continuous access to Purāṇic and Dharma-śāstric instruction, which is meant to sustain right understanding (dharma-jñāna) that supports realization; it does not define Ātman explicitly in this verse.
No specific āsana/prāṇāyāma is taught here; the practice emphasized is disciplined scriptural engagement—maintaining Purāṇa/Itihāsa/Dharma-śāstra study even on parvan days—supporting sādhana through continual reflection on dharma.
By exempting Purāṇas from anadhyāya, it upholds Purāṇic teaching as always appropriate—precisely the literature where the Kurma Purana advances Shaiva–Vaishnava harmony and integrated devotion; the synthesis is contextual rather than stated directly in this line.