Avadhūta’s Teachers: Python, Ocean, Moth, Bee, Elephant, Deer, Fish—and Piṅgalā’s Song of Detachment
तस्या वित्ताशया शुष्यद्वक्त्राया दीनचेतस: । निर्वेद: परमो जज्ञे चिन्ताहेतु: सुखावह: ॥ २७ ॥
tasyā vittāśayā śuṣyad- vaktrāyā dīna-cetasaḥ nirvedaḥ paramo jajñe cintā-hetuḥ sukhāvahaḥ
In der Hoffnung auf Geld vertrocknete ihr Gesicht, und ihr Herz wurde niedergeschlagen. Aus eben dieser Sorge um Reichtum entstand in ihr höchste Ernüchterung und Loslösung (nirveda), und daraus erhob sich Freude in ihrem Geist.
It appears from these verses that on this particular night the prostitute Piṅgalā was not at all successful in attracting customers to her house. Being completely frustrated and disappointed, she gradually became indifferent to her situation. Thus, great suffering sometimes leads one to the path of enlightenment; or, according to a Sanskrit proverb, disappointment gives rise to the greatest satisfaction.
This verse explains that when material hopes—especially for wealth—collapse and the heart becomes weary, genuine detachment can arise, and the very anxiety that once caused misery can turn into the catalyst for inner happiness through renunciation.
Pingalā’s intense frustration with material expectation becomes the turning point that awakens deep vairāgya; the Avadhūta presents her as proof that realization can arise when one abandons hope in worldly gain and turns inward toward the Supreme.
When repeated disappointment exposes the emptiness of chasing money or validation, use that moment to step back, reduce cravings, and redirect the mind toward lasting spiritual practice—then anxiety becomes a teacher rather than a tormentor.