Yati-Āśrama: Bhikṣā-vidhi, Īśvara-dhyāna, and Prāyaścitta
Mahādeva as Non-dual Brahman
मन्यते ये स्वमात्मानं विभिन्नं परमेश्वरात् / न ते पश्यन्ति तं देवं वृथा तेषां परिश्रमः
manyate ye svamātmānaṃ vibhinnaṃ parameśvarāt / na te paśyanti taṃ devaṃ vṛthā teṣāṃ pariśramaḥ
မိမိ၏အတ္တမန်ကို ပရမေရှ္ဝရမှ ကွဲပြားသည်ဟု ထင်မြင်သူတို့သည် ထိုဘုရားကို အမှန်တကယ် မမြင်နိုင်ကြ။ သူတို့၏ ကြိုးစားအားထုတ်မှုသည် အလဟဿ ဖြစ်သွား၏။
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) teaching non-dual realization in a Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis framework
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
It teaches that true realization arises when the Ātman is understood as non-different from Parameśvara; treating them as separate blocks direct vision of the Divine.
The verse prioritizes jñāna (right understanding) as essential for fruition of yoga, tapas, and worship—without non-dual insight, practice remains external and fails to culminate in direct realization.
By using the universal title Parameśvara and emphasizing non-duality, it supports the Kurma Purana’s synthesis: the Supreme Lord—revered as Shiva or Vishnu—is one reality realized as the Self.