Ācāra-Nirṇaya: Varṇa-Āśrama Dharma, Śauca, Snāna, Sandhyā, Japa, Tarpaṇa, and Gṛhastha-Dinacaryā
अन्नं बलाय मे भूमेरपामग्न्यनिलस्य च / भवत्येतत्परिणतौ ममाप्यव्याहतं सुखम्
annaṃ balāya me bhūmerapāmagnyanilasya ca / bhavatyetatpariṇatau mamāpyavyāhataṃ sukham
అన్నం నాకు బలమవుతుంది; భూమికి, జలానికి, అగ్నికి, వాయువుకూ అలాగే. ఇది పరిణమించగా నాకు కూడా అవిఘ్న సుఖం కలుగుతుంది।
Lord Vishnu
Concept: Āhāra as a dharmic support of life: when food is properly assimilated, it strengthens both the individual and the elemental balance, producing unobstructed well-being.
Vedantic Theme: Interdependence of embodied self and bhūtas; harmony (sāmya) as a condition for clarity and steadiness of mind.
Application: Eat in a way that supports digestion and balance (quantity, quality, timing); cultivate gratitude and avoid waste, recognizing food’s elemental and sacred dimension.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: adhyātma-ecology (body–elements continuum)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.213.155: body constituents and prāṇa as regulating principle
This verse frames food as a cosmic support: it strengthens the individual and sustains the elemental order (earth, water, fire, wind), implying that righteous food-related acts (like annadāna and offerings) uphold dharma and welfare.
By describing food’s transformative power and its role in welfare, the verse supports the ritual logic that offerings of food (anna/piṇḍa) are not merely symbolic—they are understood as effective support within the cosmic system that includes embodied and subtle states.
Treat food as sacred: eat ethically, avoid waste, and practice annadāna/feeding others—seeing it as strengthening life and supporting harmony in the wider natural order.