Paramahaṁsa-Dharma: The Avadhūta-like Sannyāsī and Prahlāda’s Dialogue with the ‘Python’ Saint
क्वचिदल्पं क्वचिद्भूरि भुञ्जेऽन्नं स्वाद्वस्वादु वा । क्वचिद्भूरि गुणोपेतं गुणहीनमुत क्वचित् । श्रद्धयोपहृतं क्वापि कदाचिन्मानवर्जितम् । भुञ्जे भुक्त्वाथ कस्मिंश्चिद्दिवा नक्तं यदृच्छया ॥ ३८ ॥
kvacid alpaṁ kvacid bhūri bhuñje ’nnaṁ svādv asvādu vā kvacid bhūri guṇopetaṁ guṇa-hīnam uta kvacit
أحيانًا آكل قليلًا وأحيانًا كثيرًا؛ أحيانًا يكون الطعام طيبًا وأحيانًا باهتًا أو قديمًا. أحيانًا أنال برسادًا قُدِّم باحترام، وأحيانًا طعامًا أُعطي بإهمال. أحيانًا آكل نهارًا وأحيانًا ليلًا؛ وهكذا آكل ما تيسّر بلا تكلّف.
This verse shows a perfected devotee eats without attachment—sometimes little or much, tasty or tasteless, honored or not—accepting whatever comes naturally, without demanding specific comforts.
He is teaching the standard of a liberated devotee: freedom from bodily identification and social prestige, and contentment rooted in devotion rather than sense gratification.
Practice gratitude and moderation: reduce picky demands, accept simple meals, avoid entitlement, and keep spiritual priorities first while maintaining health and duty.