Aśauca-vidhi — Rules of Birth/Death Impurity, Sapinda Circles, and Śrāddha Sequence
यदि स्यात् सूतके सूतिर्मरणे वा मृतिर्भवेत् / शेषेणैव भवेच्छुद्धिरहः शेषे त्रिरात्रकम्
yadi syāt sūtake sūtirmaraṇe vā mṛtirbhavet / śeṣeṇaiva bhavecchuddhirahaḥ śeṣe trirātrakam
Если во время сутакa (sūtaka, нечистоты по рождению) происходит ещё одно рождение, или во время нечистоты по смерти случается ещё одна смерть, то очищение достигается, считая лишь оставшуюся часть уже идущего срока. Но если остаётся только часть дня, срок очищения следует считать как три ночи.
Traditional Purana narrator (Sūta/authorial dharma-instruction voice) conveying varṇāśrama-dharma rules
Primary Rasa: shanta
This verse does not directly define Ātman; it establishes śauca (ritual purity) norms that traditionally support disciplined dharma and yogic life, which in the Kurma Purana ultimately culminate in higher knowledge and devotion.
No specific meditation is taught here; instead, it gives prerequisite conduct—managing aśauca/sūtaka and observing correct purification time—often treated as preparatory discipline (niyama/śauca) for mantra-japa, pūjā, and yogic observances emphasized elsewhere in the Kurma Purana (including Pāśupata-oriented practice).
The verse is primarily dharma-legal rather than theological; indirectly, it reflects the Purana’s integrative framework in which shared dharma and purity disciplines apply across Śaiva and Vaiṣṇava worship, supporting a unified religious practice.