Ācamana-vidhi, Śauca, and Conduct Rules for Study, Eating, and Bodily Functions
अङ्गुष्ठानामिकाभ्यां तु स्पृशेन्नेत्रद्वयं ततः / तर्जन्यङ्गुष्ठयोगेन स्पृशेन्नासापृटद्वयम्
aṅguṣṭhānāmikābhyāṃ tu spṛśennetradvayaṃ tataḥ / tarjanyaṅguṣṭhayogena spṛśennāsāpṛṭadvayam
Luego, con el pulgar y el anular se tocan ambos ojos; después, uniendo el índice con el pulgar, se tocan los dos lados de la nariz.
Sūta (narrating the discipline taught in the Kurma Purana’s yoga instructions, rooted in Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It does so indirectly: by prescribing sensory “seals” (touches to eyes and nose), it indicates that realization of the Self requires withdrawal and purification of the sense-channels, preparing the mind for inward absorption where Atman is known.
A practical nyāsa/karanyāsa-style procedure used as a preparatory limb of meditation: specific finger placements touch the eyes and sides of the nose to discipline the senses and stabilize attention, typically preceding prāṇāyāma and dhyāna.
The verse is technical rather than theological, but its placement within the Kurma Purana’s blended tradition shows shared yogic methodology: the same inner discipline is affirmed across Shaiva (Pāśupata) and Vaishnava (Kurma/Narayana) frameworks as a common path to the one Supreme.