Varṇāśrama-dharma as a Path to Bhakti
Yuga-dharma Origins, Universal Virtues, Brahmacarya and Gṛhastha Duties
स्नानभोजनहोमेषु जपोच्चारे च वाग्यत: । न च्छिन्द्यान्नखरोमाणि कक्षोपस्थगतान्यपि ॥ २४ ॥
snāna-bhojana-homeṣu japoccāre ca vāg-yataḥ na cchindyān nakha-romāṇi kakṣopastha-gatāny api
Брахмачари должен хранить молчание во время омовения, еды, совершения хомы, произнесения джапы, а также при испражнении и мочеиспускании. Ему не следует стричь ногти и волосы, включая волосы в подмышках и на лобке.
Nārada Muni gives a similar technical description of Vedic brahmacārī life in Canto Seven, Chapter Twelve, of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam.
This verse advises vāg-yama—restrained speech—during bathing, eating, fire-offerings (homa), and the recitation of japa, treating these acts as sacred and requiring focused purity.
In the Uddhava Gītā section, Kṛṣṇa teaches practical varṇāśrama-dharma and sādhana conduct to steady the mind and preserve sanctity in daily religious duties, especially as spiritual discipline declines in Kali-yuga.
Create a distraction-free routine: keep speech minimal during japa, treat meals and devotional practices as mindful rituals, and avoid grooming interruptions during sacred observances so attention remains on remembrance of the Lord.