Madhu–Kaiṭabha, Nārāyaṇa’s Yoga-Nidrā, Rudra’s Manifestation, and the Aṣṭamūrti–Trimūrti Teaching
भूमिरापो ऽनलो वायुर्व्योमाहङ्कार एव च / यस्य रूपं नमस्यामि भवन्तं ब्रह्मसंज्ञितम्
bhūmirāpo 'nalo vāyurvyomāhaṅkāra eva ca / yasya rūpaṃ namasyāmi bhavantaṃ brahmasaṃjñitam
မြေ၊ ရေ၊ မီး၊ လေ၊ အာကာသ၊ ထို့ပြင် အဟင်္ကာရ—ဤအရာတို့သည် သူ၏ ရုပ်သဏ္ဌာန် ဖြစ်၏။ ဗြဟ္မန်ဟု ခေါ်အပ်သော သင့်ထံသို့ ကျွန်ုပ် ဦးညွှတ်ပူဇော်ပါ၏။
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching in the Ishvara Gita context
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It identifies Brahman as the underlying reality whose manifestation appears as the elemental cosmos and even the ego-principle, implying the Self is not limited to a body but pervades and transcends all tattvas.
The verse supports tattva-dhyana: contemplative absorption where the practitioner recognizes the elements (bhūta) and ahaṅkāra as appearances of the one Brahman, aiding dis-identification from ego and stabilization of nondual awareness.
By emphasizing Brahman as the single reality beyond names and forms, it aligns with the Kurma Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis where the supreme is one, honored through Shaiva and Vaishnava languages without contradiction.