गृहस्थस्य सदाचारः: शौच, तर্পण, वैश्वदेव, अतिथिधर्म, भोजन-विधि, संध्योपासन, ऋतु-धर्मः
उदङ्मुखो दिवा मूत्रं विपरीतमुखो निशि कुर्वीतानापदि प्राज्ञो मूत्रोत्सर्गं च पार्थिव
udaṅmukho divā mūtraṃ viparītamukho niśi kurvītānāpadi prājño mūtrotsargaṃ ca pārthiva
大王,若非急迫之时,智者白日当面北小便;夜间则当面向相反之方,以守法度。
Sage Parāśara (teaching Maitreya; addressed here as 'O king')
Speaker: Parasara
Topic: Directional discipline (dik-niyama) for urination by day and night
Teaching: Ethical
Quality: authoritative
Concept: Even private bodily acts are to be aligned with prescribed order (niyama), expressing reverence for dharma.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma
Application: Cultivate mindful routines and hygiene disciplines; keep exceptions only for necessity (āpada).
Vishishtadvaita: Niyama expresses the Lord’s governance: disciplined action in daily life becomes a mode of living within His cosmic order rather than outside it.
Vishnu Form: Hari
Bhakti Type: Shanta
This verse frames even private acts as part of dharma: disciplined conduct (achara) supports purity (shaucha) and harmony with cosmic order, especially when no emergency compels otherwise.
Parāśara gives practical, rule-based guidance for daily life—linking cleanliness, restraint, and situational exceptions (anāpadi) to living in alignment with dharma.
Though Vishnu is not named in this line, the Vishnu Purana presents dharma and ordered living as expressions of the Lord’s sovereignty—personal discipline becomes a way of honoring the sustaining principle embodied by Vishnu.