The Account of Kāṣṭhīlā (Kāṣṭhīlā-ākhyāna) within the Mohinī Narrative
कामार्तेन विमूढेन तन्न योऽग्यं विचिंतितम् । यद्देयं तद्ददात्येष ह्यदेयं प्रार्थयस्व मा ॥ १० ॥
kāmārtena vimūḍhena tanna yo'gyaṃ viciṃtitam | yaddeyaṃ taddadātyeṣa hyadeyaṃ prārthayasva mā || 10 ||
कामार्तेन विमूढेन न युक्तं विचिन्तितम्। यद्देयं तद्ददात्येष; अदेयं मा प्रार्थयस्व॥
Narada
Vrata: none
Rasa: {"primary_rasa":"shanta","secondary_rasa":"karuna","emotional_journey":"Begins with critique of desire-born delusion, then settles into a firm ethical boundary: give only what is proper; do not request the improper."}
It teaches restraint and discernment: desire clouds judgment, so one should seek only what is dharmically appropriate, and avoid pressuring others to give what is improper.
Bhakti is supported by purity of intention; a devotee avoids greedy or adharmic demands and cultivates contentment (santoṣa), making one’s conduct aligned with worship and humility.
While not a technical Vedanga instruction, it reflects dharma-nīti used in smārta practice: discerning what is 'deya' vs 'adeya' when performing dana in ritual contexts.