Uddhava Meets the Gopīs: Bhramara-gītā and Kṛṣṇa’s Message of Separation
कस्मात् कृष्ण इहायाति प्राप्तराज्यो हताहित: । नरेन्द्रकन्या उद्वाह्य प्रीत: सर्वसुहृद् वृत: ॥ ४५ ॥
kasmāt kṛṣṇa ihāyāti prāpta-rājyo hatāhitaḥ narendra-kanyā udvāhya prītaḥ sarva-suhṛd-vṛtaḥ
কৃষ্ণ কেন এখানে আসবেন? তিনি রাজ্য লাভ করেছেন, শত্রুদের বিনাশ করেছেন, রাজাদের কন্যাদের বিবাহ করেছেন; সেখানে তিনি সকল বন্ধু ও শুভাকাঙ্ক্ষীতে পরিবেষ্টিত হয়ে তৃপ্ত।
This verse voices the gopīs’ sorrowful logic in separation: Krishna is now established as a royal hero, married into royal families, and surrounded by friends—so, from their viewpoint, He has little worldly reason to come back, intensifying their viraha-bhakti.
In the Bhramara-gītā section, Śrīmatī Rādhārāṇī (representing the gopīs’ mood) speaks to a bumblebee, treating it like a messenger connected with Krishna, while lamenting His life in Dvārakā.
It teaches steadiness in devotion even when God seems “distant”: instead of reducing bhakti to convenience or visible reciprocation, one deepens remembrance, longing, and sincerity—turning separation into intensified spiritual focus.