Avadhūta’s Teachers: Python, Ocean, Moth, Bee, Elephant, Deer, Fish—and Piṅgalā’s Song of Detachment
न ह्यङ्गाजातनिर्वेदो देहबन्धं जिहासति । यथा विज्ञानरहितो मनुजो ममतां नृप ॥ २९ ॥
na hy aṅgājāta-nirvedo deha-bandhaṁ jihāsati yathā vijñāna-rahito manujo mamatāṁ nṛpa
O King, just as a human being who is bereft of spiritual knowledge never desires to give up his false sense of proprietorship over many material things, similarly, a person who has not developed detachment never desires to give up the bondage of the material body.
This verse says that mere bodily weariness or disgust is not enough to break bondage; without realized knowledge, one still holds on to possessiveness and ‘mine’-thinking.
While instructing Uddhava on genuine renunciation, Krishna clarifies that liberation requires realized wisdom, not just emotional disappointment with worldly life.
Don’t mistake burnout or disappointment for spiritual progress; cultivate steady understanding and devotion so that possessiveness and identity based on the body naturally weaken.