Dietary Rules & Purification — Dietary Rules, Purification (Śauca), and the Duties of the Householder and Forest-Dweller
तत्रारण्योपभोगैश्च तपोभिश्चात्मकर्षणम् भूमौ शय्या ब्रह्मचर्यं पितृदेवातिथिक्रिया
tatrāraṇyopabhogaiśca tapobhiścātmakarṣaṇam bhūmau śayyā brahmacaryaṃ pitṛdevātithikriyā
అక్కడ (అరణ్యంలో) అరణ్యఫలాదులను ఆశ్రయించి, తపస్సుల ద్వారా ఆత్మనిగ్రహం చేయాలి. నేలపై శయనం, బ్రహ్మచర్యపాలన, మరియు పితృ-దేవ-అతిథి కర్మలను యథావిధిగా చేయాలి।
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The verse frames vānaprastha as a disciplined transition from household life: simplicity (sleeping on the ground), chastity, and continued social-sacral responsibility (honoring gods, ancestors, and guests) alongside tapas. Renunciation here is not neglect of duty but purification through restrained living.
It aligns best with Dharma/Ācāra material often embedded within Purāṇas; within pañcalakṣaṇa labels it is closest to 'Vamśānucarita' adjunct teachings or general 'dharma-kathā' rather than sarga/pratisarga/manvantara proper. (Purāṇas frequently include such normative sections beyond the strict five marks.)
Forest life symbolizes interiorization: 'ātmakarṣaṇa' indicates drawing the senses and ego inward. Service to pitṛ, deva, and atithi indicates that spiritual progress is integrated with gratitude (ancestral continuity), reverence (cosmic order), and hospitality (ethical universality).