Sadācāra–Varṇa-lakṣaṇa and Prātaḥkṛtya
Right Conduct, Social Typologies, and Morning Purification
मलमुत्सृज्य चोत्थाय न पश्येच्चैव तन्मलम् । उद्धृतेन जलेनैव शौचं कुर्याज्जलाद्बहिः
malamutsṛjya cotthāya na paśyeccaiva tanmalam | uddhṛtena jalenaiva śaucaṃ kuryājjalādbahiḥ
بعد قضاء الحاجة ثم القيام، لا ينبغي النظر إلى ذلك الغائط. وبالماء المأخوذ باليد أو في إناء وحده تُجرى الطهارة خارج الماء، لا أثناء الوقوف داخل مورد الماء.
Suta Goswami (instructing the sages at Naimisharanya on dharma and ritual purity as part of Shiva-worship discipline)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Sadāśiva
Significance: Teaches śauca as a gatekeeping discipline for approaching Śiva; reinforces that sacred waters are not to be treated casually (purification is done outside the source).
The verse teaches śauca (purificatory discipline): controlling the senses (not gazing at impurity) and maintaining hygienic, respectful conduct. In Shaiva Siddhanta, such outer purity supports inner clarity (antaḥśuddhi), making the devotee fit for mantra-japa and Linga worship.
Linga worship emphasizes approaching Saguna Shiva with reverence and cleanliness. This instruction ensures the devotee completes bodily purification properly before entering a sacred space, offering water, or performing Panchakshara japa—so the worship is done in a sattvic, disciplined manner.
It prescribes practical śauca: cleanse using water drawn out from the source (not contaminating the water-body) and cultivate sensory restraint. As a takeaway, perform purification first, then begin Shiva practices such as japa of “Om Namaḥ Śivāya” with a clean body and steady mind.