Dehāśucitā-vicāraḥ
Inquiry into the Impurity of the Body
शुक्रशोणितसंयोगाद्देहस्संजायते यतः । नित्यं विण्मूत्रसंपूर्णस्तेनायमशुचिस्स्मृतः
śukraśoṇitasaṃyogāddehassaṃjāyate yataḥ | nityaṃ viṇmūtrasaṃpūrṇastenāyamaśucissmṛtaḥ
ព្រោះរាងកាយកើតឡើងពីការរួមបញ្ចូលនៃទឹកកាម និងឈាម ហើយតែងពេញដោយអាចម៍ និងទឹកនោម ដូច្នេះរាងកាយនេះត្រូវបានចាត់ទុកថាមិនបរិសុទ្ធ។ តាមប្រាជ្ញាសៃវៈ ការយល់ដឹងនេះបង្កើតវិរាគ្យ បង្វែរអ្នកស្វែងរកពីការចងចិត្តលើរាងកាយដែលរលួយ ទៅរកព្រះសិវៈ ព្រះបតិដ៏បរិសុទ្ធ អ្នកប្រទានមោក្ខ។
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.