Nīti on Friendship (Mitra), Discretion, Restraint, Health-Regimens, Prosperity (Śrī), and Family Dharma
नित्यं छेदस्तृणानं धरणिविलखनं पादयोश्चापमार्ष्टिः दन्तानामप्यशौचं मलिनवसनता रूक्षता मूर्धजानाम् / द्वे सध्ये चापि निद्रा विवसनशयनं ग्रासहासातिरेकः स्वाङ्गे पीठे च वाद्यं निधनमुपनयेत्केशवस्यापि लक्ष्मीम्
nityaṃ chedastṛṇānaṃ dharaṇivilakhanaṃ pādayoścāpamārṣṭiḥ dantānāmapyaśaucaṃ malinavasanatā rūkṣatā mūrdhajānām / dve sadhye cāpi nidrā vivasanaśayanaṃ grāsahāsātirekaḥ svāṅge pīṭhe ca vādyaṃ nidhanamupanayetkeśavasyāpi lakṣmīm
常に草を刈り、地を掻き削り掘り、足をこすり続け、歯を不浄のままにし、汚れた衣をまとい、髪を乾き荒れさせること。さらに暁と黄昏の二つのサンディヤに眠り、裸で横たわり、食事中に笑い過ぎ、己の身や座・寝床を打つこと——これらの習いは破滅を招き、ケーシャヴァに属するラクシュミーさえも追い払う。
Lord Viṣṇu (Keśava) instructing Garuḍa (Vinātā-putra), contextually within dharma/ācāra teachings
Dosha: Kapha
Concept: Tamas-laden habits (uncleanliness, impropriety at sandhyā, indecorum, self-harm) drive away auspiciousness (Lakṣmī), regardless of nominal devotion.
Vedantic Theme: Sattva as the vessel of grace: external ācāra mirrors inner guṇa-balance; neglect strengthens tamas and invites decline.
Application: Keep body and clothing clean, maintain respectful conduct at dawn/dusk, avoid indecent sleeping habits, cultivate mindful eating, and refrain from self-harming gestures.
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Type: household/worksite and sleeping quarters
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.114.35 (Lakṣmī departs due to slovenliness); Garuda Purana 1.114.37 (six Lakṣmī-restoring practices); Garuda Purana 1.114.38 (flower on head to repel Alakṣmī)
The verse links everyday impurities—unclean teeth, dirty clothes, neglected hair, and improper habits—to inauspiciousness and the decline of prosperity (Lakṣmī), presenting cleanliness as a practical expression of dharma.
It teaches that certain undisciplined behaviors—especially impurity, improper sleep at sandhyā, and disrespectful conduct while eating—create conditions that “drive away” Lakṣmī, meaning fortune and well-being deteriorate.
Maintain basic hygiene, wear clean clothes, avoid sleeping during dawn/dusk if possible, practice mindful eating without excessive joking, and avoid self-harming or disruptive habits—treating daily routine as a form of dharmic discipline.