Yati-Āśrama: Bhikṣā-vidhi, Īśvara-dhyāna, and Prāyaścitta
Mahādeva as Non-dual Brahman
हुत्वा प्राणाहुतीः पञ्च ग्रासानष्टौ समाहितः / आचम्य देवं ब्रह्माणं ध्यायीत परमेश्वरम्
hutvā prāṇāhutīḥ pañca grāsānaṣṭau samāhitaḥ / ācamya devaṃ brahmāṇaṃ dhyāyīta parameśvaram
Matapos ihandog ang limang banal na alay sa mga hininga ng buhay, at kumain ng walong subo na may natipong isip, gawin ang ācamanā at saka magnilay sa Kataas-taasang Panginoon—ang Brahman, ang banal na Parameśvara.
Kurma Purana narrator (Vyasa/Sūta tradition) prescribing a ritual-yogic procedure
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It directs meditation on Parameśvara identified with Brahman, implying the highest reality is the divine Absolute—beyond mere ritual—accessible through inner contemplation.
It presents a ritual-to-yoga sequence: prāṇāhuti (inner offering to the vital breaths), measured eating with mindfulness, ācamana for purity, and then dhyāna on Īśvara—typical of Kurma Purana’s disciplined, Pāśupata-leaning praxis.
By using the universal title Parameśvara and equating the worshipped Lord with Brahman, it supports the Purana’s non-sectarian synthesis where the Supreme is one, expressed through Shaiva-Vaishnava theological language.