Avadhūta’s Teachers: Python, Ocean, Moth, Bee, Elephant, Deer, Fish—and Piṅgalā’s Song of Detachment
ओज:सहोबलयुतं बिभ्रद् देहमकर्मकम् । शयानो वीतनिद्रश्च नेहेतेन्द्रियवानपि ॥ ४ ॥
ojaḥ-saho-bala-yutaṁ bibhrad deham akarmakam śayāno vīta-nidraś ca nehetendriyavān api
ينبغي للقدّيس أن يبقى ساكنًا مطمئنًا غير منشغل بالمكاسب المادية، محافظًا على الجسد بلا تكلف كبير. ومع امتلاكه قوة الحواس والعقل والبدن، لا يتحرك طلبًا للربح الدنيوي، بل يظل يقظًا دائمًا لمصلحته الروحية الحقيقية.
The word vīta-nidraḥ in this verse is very significant. Nidrā means “sleep” or “ignorance,” and vīta means “freed from.” In other words, a transcendentalist should always be awake to his eternal relationship with the Supreme Personality of Godhead and should carefully cultivate Kṛṣṇa consciousness. Being confident of his relationship with the Lord, he should not endeavor for his personal maintenance, knowing that the Lord is protecting him in all respects. Śrīla Viśvanātha Cakravartī Ṭhākura states that the example of the python is given so that one will not uselessly waste his time in bodily maintenance.
This verse describes a realized person who still possesses senses but does not chase sense-objects; mastery is shown by non-engagement rather than by destroying the senses.
Because he has risen beyond fruitive work and ego-driven endeavor; his body is maintained, yet he does not act for material outcomes, illustrating renunciation and non-doership.
Keep the senses, but reduce compulsive engagement: simplify habits, avoid unnecessary stimulation, and redirect attention to sādhana—hearing, chanting, and mindful living.