Purūravā’s Song of Renunciation and the Glory of Sādhu-saṅga
श्रीभगवानुवाच एवं प्रगायन् नृपदेवदेव: स उर्वशीलोकमथो विहाय । आत्मानमात्मन्यवगम्य मां वै उपारमज्ज्ञानविधूतमोह: ॥ २५ ॥
śrī-bhagavān uvāca evaṁ pragāyan nṛpa-deva-devaḥ sa urvaśī-lokam atho vihāya ātmānam ātmany avagamya māṁ vai upāramaj jñāna-vidhūta-mohaḥ
The Supreme Personality of Godhead said: Having thus chanted this song, Mahārāja Purūravā, eminent among the demigods and human beings, gave up the position he had achieved in the planet of Urvaśī. His illusion cleansed away by transcendental knowledge, he understood Me to be the Supreme Soul within his heart and so at last achieved peace.
This verse concludes that Purūravā gives up Urvaśī’s association and becomes peaceful by self-realization and realization of the Lord, with delusion destroyed by true knowledge.
Krishna uses Purūravā’s transformation—from infatuation to renunciation—to teach Uddhava that attachment binds the mind, but knowledge and turning inward lead to peace and God-realization.
Recognize how desire-driven relationships or pursuits disturb the mind, cultivate discernment, and re-center life on the soul’s identity and devotion to God—then agitation naturally subsides.