Bhojana-vidhi and Nitya-karman: Directions for Eating, Prāṇa-Oblations, Sandhyā, and Conduct Leading to Apavarga
महाव्यहृतिभिस्त्वन्नं परिधायोदकेन तु / अमृतोपस्तरणमसीत्यापोशानक्रियां चरेत्
mahāvyahṛtibhistvannaṃ paridhāyodakena tu / amṛtopastaraṇamasītyāpośānakriyāṃ caret
మహావ్యాహృతులను జపిస్తూ నీటితో అన్నాన్ని పరిధి చేసి సంస్కరించి; తరువాత “నీవు అమృతపు ఉపస్తరణము” అని పలుకుతూ ఆపోశన క్రియ చేయాలి।
Traditional narrator voice of the Purana (instructional dharma-vidhi passage; framed as authoritative teaching within the Kurma Purana)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Indirectly: by treating food and water as sacred supports of life, the verse reflects the dharmic view that bodily sustenance should be aligned with higher reality—purified action (karma) becomes a means for inner clarity conducive to Self-knowledge.
A discipline of ritual mindfulness: consecrating food with vyāhṛtis and performing āpośana trains attention, purity (śauca), and restraint—supportive foundations for Yoga (including Pāśupata-influenced purity and observance practices found across the Kurma Purana).
Not by naming them explicitly, but through shared dharma-vidhi: the sanctification of daily acts is a common ground in Shaiva-Vaishnava synthesis—purity, mantra, and offering-oriented living are upheld as universally valid in the Purana’s integrated theology.