Adhyaya 50 — Mind-Born Progeny, Svayambhuva Manu’s Lineage, and Brahmā’s Ordinance to Duḥsaha (Alakṣmī’s Retinue)
भग्नासनस्थितैर्भुक्तमासन्नागतमेव च ।
विदिङ्मुखं सन्ध्ययोश्च नृत्यवाद्यस्वनाकुलम् ॥
bhagnāsanasthitair bhuktam āsannāgatam eva ca | vidiṅmukhaṃ sandhyayośca nṛtyavādyasvanākulam ||
「壊れた座に坐して食する食、また乱雑/不浄のまま近くに運ばれた食。さらに不適切な方角に向かって、また黄昏時に取る食。加えて舞踊・楽器・喧噪の騒ぎのただ中で取る食——これらが汝の(条件)である。」
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "dharmya", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The verse links outer order with inner order: eating in broken, noisy, ill-timed, or careless settings cultivates restlessness and dullness. Sandhyā is traditionally reserved for purification; violating it symbolizes prioritizing appetite over discipline.
Ācāra-dharma guidance embedded in narrative; not a pancalakṣaṇa core heading.
‘Wrong direction’ and ‘twilight’ can indicate liminal, unstable states of mind. Consuming impressions in such instability feeds tamas and makes consciousness ‘directionless.’