Dhruva’s Humiliation, Sunīti’s Counsel, and Nārada’s Bhakti-Yoga Instruction
मुनय: पदवीं यस्य नि:सङ्गेनोरुजन्मभि: । न विदुर्मृगयन्तोऽपि तीव्रयोगसमाधिना ॥ ३१ ॥
munayaḥ padavīṁ yasya niḥsaṅgenoru-janmabhiḥ na vidur mṛgayanto ’pi tīvra-yoga-samādhinā
Nārada Muni continued: After trying this process for many, many births and remaining unattached to material contamination, placing themselves continually in trance and executing many types of austerities, many mystic yogīs were unable to find the end of the path of God realization.
This verse says that even intense yoga and deep samādhi may not reveal the Supreme Lord’s true position; He is ultimately known by His own grace and the path of devotion.
In the Dhruva narrative, the point is to show that mere austerity, detachment, and yogic searching are insufficient by themselves—Dhruva’s success will come through focused devotion and the Lord’s mercy.
Spiritual practice should be grounded in humility and bhakti—seek God with devotion and surrender, not only with technique, achievement, or intellectual effort.