Kṣaura-Snāna-Vidhi — Rite of Tonsure/Shaving and Purificatory Bath (Śaiva Procedure)
अलाबुं वेणुपात्रं च दारवम्मृण्मयन्तथा । भिक्षोश्चत्त्वारि पात्राणि पञ्चमन्नैव विद्यते
alābuṃ veṇupātraṃ ca dāravammṛṇmayantathā | bhikṣoścattvāri pātrāṇi pañcamannaiva vidyate
சைவ மார்க்கத்தில் நிலைத்த பிக்ஷுவிற்கு பிச்சைப் பாத்திரங்கள் நான்கே அனுமதி—அலாபு (சுரைக்காய்), வேணு (மூங்கில்), தாரு (மரம்), ம்ருண்மய (மண்); ஐந்தாவது இல்லை.
Lord Shiva (teaching the discipline of renunciation in Kailasa discourse)
Tattva Level: pashu
Shiva Form: Bhikṣāṭana
Role: teaching
It teaches aparigraha—minimizing possessions—so the pashu (individual soul) loosens pasha (bondage) and becomes fit for Shiva’s grace (Pati-anugraha). Limiting even the alms-bowl disciplines desire and supports steady yoga and japa.
Saguna Shiva worship in the Purana is not merely ritual; it is matched by inner purity and restraint. A renunciant who keeps only simple, permitted vessels embodies humility and steadiness, making Linga-puja, Panchakshara japa, and meditation more sattvic and focused.
The practical takeaway is disciplined simplicity: keep minimal requisites, accept alms without greed, and devote the mind to Panchakshara japa (Om Namaḥ Śivāya) and dhyana; such restraint supports the effective use of bhasma (Tripuṇḍra) and Rudraksha as aids to recollection of Shiva.