Prāyaścitta for Mahāpātakas: Liquor, Theft, Sexual Transgression, Contact with the Fallen, and Homicide
अब्दं चरेत नियतो वनवासी समाहितः / प्राजापत्यं सान्तपनं तप्तकृच्छ्रं तु वा स्वयम्
abdaṃ careta niyato vanavāsī samāhitaḥ / prājāpatyaṃ sāntapanaṃ taptakṛcchraṃ tu vā svayam
Disciplinado e com autocontrole, habitando na floresta com a mente recolhida, deve-se empreender o voto por um ano; ou então, realizar por si mesmo a penitência Prājāpatya, a Sāntapana ou a austeridade Taptakṛcchra.
Sūta (narrating traditional dharma/prāyaścitta instructions as transmitted by the sages)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Indirectly: it emphasizes purification through restraint and concentrated living, preparing the mind for Self-knowledge (ātma-jñāna) that the Kurma Purana later frames within an Ishvara-centered (Śiva–Viṣṇu non-opposed) vision.
It highlights niyama (regulated discipline) and samādhāna/samāhita-citta (collected mind) supported by tapas—forest-dwelling and formal kṛcchra-type austerities—as preparatory limbs that stabilize the practitioner for higher contemplation.
Not by naming them directly, but by presenting tapas and purification as universal dharma: the Kurma Purana’s broader synthesis treats such disciplines as compatible with both Śaiva (Pāśupata) and Vaiṣṇava devotion, culminating in Ishvara-oriented realization rather than sectarian opposition.