Rules of Purity (Shauca) — Rules of Purity (Śauca), Permissible Foods, and the Duties of the Householder and Forest-Dweller
नाभ्यङ्गमर्के न च भूमिपुत्रे क्षौरं च शुक्रे रविजे च मांसम् बुधेषु योषिन्न समाचरेत शेषेषु सर्वाणि सदैव कुर्यात्
nābhyaṅgamarke na ca bhūmiputre kṣauraṃ ca śukre ravije ca māṃsam budheṣu yoṣinna samācareta śeṣeṣu sarvāṇi sadaiva kuryāt
रविवारी व मंगळवारी अभ्यंग करू नये. शुक्रवारी क्षौर (दाढी/मुंडण) करू नये. रविवारी मांसाहार करू नये. बुधवारी स्त्रीसंग (कामसंबंध) टाळावा. उरलेल्या दिवशी ही सर्व कर्मे करता येतात.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Discipline over bodily pleasures (comfort, grooming, diet, sexuality) is framed as dhārmic self-regulation aligned with cosmic time (vāra). The aim is steadiness (niyama) and reduction of rajas/tamas through periodic restraint.
It belongs to Ācāra/Dharma material rather than the five hallmark topics (sarga, pratisarga, vaṃśa, manvantara, vaṃśānucarita). In Pancalakṣaṇa terms it is ancillary dharma-śāstra style instruction embedded within Purāṇic narration.
The weekdays are governed by grahas; restricting certain acts on specific vāras symbolizes harmonizing personal conduct with perceived planetary qualities (e.g., Mars with heat/irritability; hence avoiding abhyanga, Venus with sensuality; hence avoiding shaving as a luxury act, etc.).