Āhnika-Dharma: Dawn Purification, Sandhyā-Upāsanā, Tarpana, Pañca-Mahāyajñas, and Aśauca Rules
आचम्य विधिवन्नित्यं पुनराचम्य वाग्यतः / संमार्ज्य मन्त्रै रात्मानं कुशैः सोदकबिन्दुभैः
ācamya vidhivannityaṃ punarācamya vāgyataḥ / saṃmārjya mantrai rātmānaṃ kuśaiḥ sodakabindubhaiḥ
Matapos magsagawa ng ācaman (pag-inom ng banal na tubig) araw-araw ayon sa itinakdang paraan, at muling ācaman na may pagpipigil sa pananalita, linisin ang sarili sa pamamagitan ng mga mantra, gamit ang damong kuśa at mga patak ng tubig.
Lord Vishnu (teaching Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Śauca and vāk-niyama (speech-restraint) purify the adhikārī for mantra and worship.
Vedantic Theme: Antaḥkaraṇa-śuddhi as preparation for higher knowledge and devotion.
Application: Perform ācamanam correctly, keep speech restrained during rites, and use mantra-supported cleansing to cultivate steadiness before japa/pujā.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Type: ritual space (home shrine/riverbank implied)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.50 (sandhyā-vidhi sequence: ācamanam → mantra-śauca → arghya → prāṇāyāma → dhyāna/japa)
This verse presents ācamana as a daily, rule-based act of purification—done more than once and paired with restraint of speech—so the practitioner becomes ritually fit for mantra and worship.
Indirectly, it emphasizes self-purification and disciplined conduct (ācāra) as foundational dharma; such purity-oriented actions are taught as supportive conditions for spiritual progress and auspicious outcomes.
Begin any prayer, japa, or sacred study with mindful cleansing: perform ācamana properly, maintain controlled speech, and approach mantra practice with a purified and attentive state.