The Explanation of Sandhyā and Related Daily Observances
Saṅdhyā-ādi Nitya-karma-Vidhi
पितृभूतगणाः सर्वे करिष्ये मलमोचनम् । इति तालत्रयं दत्वा शिरः प्रावृत्य वाससा ॥ ४ ॥
pitṛbhūtagaṇāḥ sarve kariṣye malamocanam | iti tālatrayaṃ datvā śiraḥ prāvṛtya vāsasā || 4 ||
«Ô vous toutes, assemblées des Pitṛs et des Bhūtas, je vais à présent me décharger de l’impureté.» Ayant dit cela, il frappe des mains trois fois et, se couvrant la tête d’un tissu, s’en va.
Narada (instructional narration within a ritual/ācāra context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
It frames even a private bodily act within dharma: one formally announces the act to surrounding unseen beings (Pitṛs/Bhūtas) and follows a modest, regulated procedure, emphasizing śauca (purity), restraint, and non-offense.
Bhakti is supported by disciplined living—cleanliness, humility, and mindful conduct. By treating daily actions as regulated duties, one preserves inner purity that sustains steady remembrance and worship.
It reflects ritual-ācāra and śauca rules (practical dharma procedure): a prescribed gesture (three claps) and modest covering of the head, illustrating technical ritual conduct rather than grammar or astrology.