Saṅkara-jāti-nirṇaya and Gṛhastha-ācāra: Daily Rites, Purity, Anadhyāya, and Food Discipline
न तु मेहेन्नदीच्छायाभस्मगोष्टाम्बुवर्त्मसु / न प्रत्यग्न्यर्कगोसोमसन्ध्याम्बुस्त्रीद्विजन्मनाम्
na tu mehennadīcchāyābhasmagoṣṭāmbuvartmasu / na pratyagnyarkagosomasandhyāmbustrīdvijanmanām
Huwag umihi sa ilog, sa lilim, sa abo, sa kulungan ng baka, sa tubig, o sa mga daanan; at ang dvija (dalawang ulit na isinilang) ay huwag ding umihi na nakaharap sa apoy, sa araw, sa baka, sa buwan, sa sandhyā (bukang-liwayway/takipsilim), sa tubig, sa babae, o sa isang brāhmaṇa.
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vinatā-putra)
Concept: Maintain ritual and social purity by avoiding urination in sacred/communal places and by not facing revered entities/times while doing so.
Vedantic Theme: Discipline of body supports discipline of mind; honoring sacred order (rita) reduces tamas and cultivates sattva.
Application: Respect shared spaces and sacred contexts; follow hygiene norms; cultivate mindful bodily conduct rather than impulsive behavior.
Primary Rasa: bibhatsa
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Type: ritual-pure spaces
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.96 (shauca rules; bodily conduct and purity)
This verse frames bodily functions under dharma: avoiding sacred/ritually significant places and revered beings preserves śauca (purity) and cultivates restraint and reverence in daily life.
Ācāra (right conduct) is presented as a karmic discipline: disrespecting sacred elements (fire, sun, sandhyā, water, cow, brāhmaṇa) is treated as adharma that accumulates demerit and obstructs spiritual progress.
Maintain hygienic, respectful behavior: avoid contaminating water sources and public paths, and observe cultural boundaries around worship spaces and revered persons—practicing śauca and mindfulness in everyday actions.