Dharma of the Conduct of the Vānaprastha Āśrama
Forest-Dweller Discipline
चीरवासा भवेन्नित्यं स्नायात्त्रिषवणं शुचिः । सर्वभूतानुकंपश्च प्रतिग्रहविवर्जितः
cīravāsā bhavennityaṃ snāyāttriṣavaṇaṃ śuciḥ | sarvabhūtānukaṃpaśca pratigrahavivarjitaḥ
నిత్యం చీరవస్త్రం (చెట్టు తొక్క వస్త్రం) ధరించి, త్రిసంధ్య స్నానం చేసి శుచిగా ఉండాలి. సమస్త భూతాల పట్ల కరుణ కలిగి, ప్రతిగ్రహం (బహుమతి స్వీకారం) వర్జించాలి.
Unspecified (context not provided for the dialogue frame in this excerpt).
Concept: Purity (śauca), self-restraint, and universal compassion are the foundation of meritorious religious life; non-acceptance of gifts protects inner freedom and prevents ritual life from becoming transactional.
Application: Adopt simple living, regular bathing/cleanliness, deliberate compassion (non-harm in speech/food), and reduce dependency on favors or gifts that compromise integrity.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A serene forest hermitage at dawn: a disciplined ascetic in simple bark-cloth steps from a clear river after the third daily bath, hands folded in quiet prayer. Nearby, small creatures—deer, birds, and a stray dog—gather without fear, reflecting his compassion and harmlessness; a simple leaf-hut and a fire-altar sit in the background, untouched by worldly gifts.","primary_figures":["a disciplined dvija-ascetic (brāhmaṇa)","forest animals as symbols of sarva-bhūta-dayā"],"setting":"riverbank beside a modest āśrama with kuśa grass, a small altar, and hanging bark garments; distant sal trees and soft mist","lighting_mood":"golden dawn","color_palette":["river-jade green","mist pearl-white","bark umber","saffron-ochre","leaf deep emerald"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: a calm ascetic in bark-cloth on a riverbank performing añjali after tri-savana snāna, small hermitage and yajña-vedi behind; gold leaf halo-like radiance around the figure to signify inner purity, rich vermilion and emerald accents, ornate yet restrained jewelry absent to emphasize renunciation, delicate gold detailing on water ripples and foliage.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: lyrical forest āśrama at dawn with cool greens and pale mist, slender ascetic in simple bark-cloth, gentle deer and birds nearby; delicate brushwork, refined facial features, soft Himalayan-like atmospheric perspective, quiet river curves and flowering shrubs framing the scene.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlined ascetic figure with serene eyes, river and forest rendered in flat natural pigments; temple-wall aesthetic with rhythmic foliage patterns, warm ochres and greens, minimal ornamentation, emphasis on śauca and dayā through calm posture and surrounding animals.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: devotional border of tulasi-like floral motifs and lotuses around a central riverbank scene; the ascetic in bark-cloth shown as an emblem of sāttvika dharma, peacocks and cows at the margins symbolizing gentleness; deep indigo background with gold highlights and intricate floral filigree."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"meditative","suggested_raga":"Bhupali","pace":"slow-meditative","voice_tone":"serene","sound_elements":["flowing water","morning birds","soft temple bell in distance","silence between phrases"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: भवेत् + नित्यम् → भवेन्नित्यम्; स्नायात् + त्रिषवणम् → स्नायात्त्रिषवणम्; अनुकम्पः + च → अनुकम्पश्च
It outlines ascetic discipline: simple clothing, ritual cleanliness through thrice-daily bathing, inner purity, universal compassion, and non-acceptance of gifts.
Triṣavaṇa means performing bathing (and implied daily observances) three times a day—typically at dawn, noon, and dusk (the three sandhyās).
Avoiding gifts reduces dependence and obligation, supports renunciation, and protects the practitioner’s integrity and purity of intention.