Dehāśucitā-vicāraḥ
Inquiry into the Impurity of the Body
शुक्रशोणितसंयोगाद्देहस्संजायते यतः । नित्यं विण्मूत्रसंपूर्णस्तेनायमशुचिस्स्मृतः
śukraśoṇitasaṃyogāddehassaṃjāyate yataḥ | nityaṃ viṇmūtrasaṃpūrṇastenāyamaśucissmṛtaḥ
لأن الجسد ينشأ من اقتران المنيّ بالدم، ولأنه ممتلئ على الدوام بالغائط والبول، عُدَّ هذا الجسد نجسًا. ومن منظور حكمة الشيفاوية، فإن إدراك ذلك يُنبت الفيراغيا (الزهد)، ويصرف السالك عن التعلّق بالجسد الفاني إلى الرب شيفا، الـ«پَتي» الطاهر وواهب الموكشا (التحرّر).
Lord Shiva
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Dakṣiṇāmūrti
Significance: Viveka (discernment) regarding bodily impurity supports vairāgya, making the aspirant fit for Śiva-darśana and guru-upadeśa; pilgrimage becomes inward—turning from deha-abhimāna to Pati-bhakti.
It teaches vairāgya (dispassion): by seeing the body’s origin and constant impurities, one loosens egoic body-identification (pāśa) and seeks the pure, liberating grace of Śiva (Pati).
By contrasting the body’s impurity with Śiva’s purity, the verse supports turning to the Śiva-liṅga as a sacred focus for devotion—worship is a practical reorientation from the transient body to the ever-pure Lord.
Cultivate detachment through daily japa of the Pañcākṣarī (Om Namaḥ Śivāya) and contemplative reflection on impermanence; this inner purity complements external Śaiva disciplines such as bhasma/tripuṇḍra and Śiva-pūjā where appropriate.