Daily Duties of Brāhmaṇas: Snāna, Sandhyā, Sūrya-hṛdaya, Japa, Tarpaṇa, and the Pañca-mahāyajñas
यदि स्यात् क्लिन्नवासा वै वारिमध्यगतो जपेत् / अन्यथा तु शुचौ भूम्यां दर्भेषु सुसमाहितः
yadi syāt klinnavāsā vai vārimadhyagato japet / anyathā tu śucau bhūmyāṃ darbheṣu susamāhitaḥ
หากอาภรณ์เปียกชื้น พึงชปะโดยยืนอยู่ท่ามกลางน้ำ; มิฉะนั้นพึงชปะบนพื้นดินอันสะอาด นั่งบนหญ้าทรรภะด้วยจิตตั้งมั่น
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) instructing sages/seekers on japa discipline
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Indirectly, it emphasizes that realization requires a steady, gathered mind (samāhita). External purity supports inner stillness, which is the proximate condition for turning awareness toward the Atman beyond ritual circumstances.
It highlights mantra-japa performed with śauca (cleanliness) and samādhāna (concentration). It also gives a situational rule: if wet-clothed, perform japa in water; otherwise sit on clean ground on darbha, aligning with classical yogic discipline of posture, purity, and focused repetition.
By presenting a shared sādhanā framework—purity, japa, and mental collectedness—this instruction fits the Kurma Purana’s synthetic approach where Vaiṣṇava narration (Kurma/Vishnu) authorizes practices widely honored in Śaiva-Pāśupata and broader Yoga traditions.