Veṇu-gīta-āhvāna and the Gopīs’ Appeal: The Opening of Rāsa-līlā
कुर्वन्ति हि त्वयि रतिं कुशला: स्व आत्मन् नित्यप्रिये पतिसुतादिभिरार्तिदै: किम् । तन्न: प्रसीद परमेश्वर मा स्म छिन्द्या आशां धृतां त्वयि चिरादरविन्दनेत्र ॥ ३३ ॥
kurvanti hi tvayi ratiṁ kuśalāḥ sva ātman nitya-priye pati-sutādibhir ārti-daiḥ kim tan naḥ prasīda parameśvara mā sma chindyā āśāṁ dhṛtāṁ tvayi cirād aravinda-netra
Expert transcendentalists always direct their affection toward You because they recognize You as their true Self and eternal beloved. What use do we have for these husbands, children and relatives of ours, who simply give us trouble? Therefore, O supreme controller, grant us Your mercy. O lotus-eyed one, please do not cut down our long-cherished hope to have Your association.
It teaches that the truly wise place their deepest loving attachment (rati) in Kṛṣṇa, seeing worldly ties as ultimately sorrow-giving compared to the soul’s eternal relationship with the Lord.
In the context of Kṛṣṇa’s call, the gopīs contrast temporary, duty-bound worldly bonds with the soul’s longing for Bhagavān; such bonds can obstruct divine love and thus become sources of anguish when they separate one from Kṛṣṇa.
It points to prioritizing devotion internally—keeping hope and love fixed on God—while performing family and social duties as service, not as the ultimate shelter for the heart.