Cosmic Manifestation, Mahāmāyā’s Mandate, Varṇāśrama-Dharma, and the Unity of the Trimūrti
ततः सा सहजा सिद्धिस्तासां नातीव जायते / रजोमात्रात्मिकास्तासां सिद्धयो ऽन्यास्तदाभवन्
tataḥ sā sahajā siddhistāsāṃ nātīva jāyate / rajomātrātmikāstāsāṃ siddhayo 'nyāstadābhavan
それゆえ、彼らに本来備わる生得の成就は大いには現れず、代わってラジャス(激動の気質)を主とする別の成就が、その時彼らに生じた。
Sūta (narrating to the sages at Naimiṣāraṇya)
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: shanta
By contrasting “innate perfection” with rajasic attainments, the verse implies that true fulfillment is natural to the Self and is obscured when consciousness is dominated by rajas; siddhis born of agitation are not the same as Self-realization.
The verse cautions that when practice is driven by rajas (restlessness, desire for power or display), practitioners tend to gain secondary yogic powers rather than the deeper, natural siddhi of steady inner realization emphasized in the Kurma Purana’s yoga discourse.
Indirectly: the Kurma Purana’s synthesis treats true siddhi as arising from inner purity and devotion to the supreme Lord beyond the guṇas—honored as Hari-Hara in spirit—whereas rajasic powers are portrayed as inferior, regardless of sectarian labeling.