Ācamana-vidhi, Śauca, and Conduct Rules for Study, Eating, and Bodily Functions
यद्यमत्रं समादाय भवेदुच्छेषणान्वितः / अनिधायैव तद् द्रव्यमाचान्तः शुचितामियात् / वस्त्रादिषु विकल्पः स्यात् तत्संस्पृष्ट्वाचमेदिह
yadyamatraṃ samādāya bhaveduccheṣaṇānvitaḥ / anidhāyaiva tad dravyamācāntaḥ śucitāmiyāt / vastrādiṣu vikalpaḥ syāt tatsaṃspṛṣṭvācamediha
Kung matapos hawakan ang isang sisidlan (para sa tubig) ay maapektuhan ng dumi mula sa ucchiṣṭa (tira-tirang pagkain), nang hindi ibinababa ang bagay na iyon ay magsagawa ng ācamanā at sa gayon ay muling maging dalisay. Sa damit at mga katulad nito, may ibang paraan: matapos itong mahawakan, magsagawa ng ācamanā rito upang luminis.
Traditional narrator/śāstra voice (dharma-instruction within the Kurma Purana)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Indirectly: it teaches śauca (purificatory discipline) as a prerequisite for steadiness of mind; such outer discipline supports inner clarity needed for Atman-knowledge, a recurring Kurma Purana emphasis.
Ācamana is not meditation itself, but it is a preparatory observance (niyama-like discipline) that supports mantra-japa, pūjā, and yogic concentration by restoring ritual and mental cleanliness after contact with impurity.
By focusing on shared dharma and śauca norms rather than sectarian markers, it reflects the Kurma Purana’s synthesis: the same purity-discipline underlies both Śaiva and Vaiṣṇava worship and yogic practice.