The Song of the Avantī Brāhmaṇa (Avanti-brāhmaṇa-gītā): Mind as the Root of Suffering and Equanimity Amid Insult
कालस्तुहेतु: सुखदु:खयोश्चेत् किमात्मनस्तत्रतदात्मकोऽसौ । नाग्नेर्हि तापो न हिमस्य तत् स्यात् क्रुध्येत कस्मै न परस्य द्वन्द्वम् ॥ ५५ ॥
kālas tu hetuḥ sukha-duḥkhayoś cet kim ātmanas tatra tad-ātmako ’sau nāgner hi tāpo na himasya tat syāt krudhyeta kasmai na parasya dvandvam
സുഖദുഃഖങ്ങളുടെ കാരണം കാലമെന്നു കരുതിയാലും അത് ആത്മാവിനോട് ചേർന്നതല്ല. കാലം ഭഗവാന്റെ ശക്തിയുടെ പ്രകടനമാണ്; ജീവികളും അതേ ശക്തിയുടെ അംശങ്ങളാണ്. അഗ്നി സ്വന്തം ജ്വാലയെ കത്തിക്കില്ല; ഹിമം സ്വന്തം ശീതംകൊണ്ട് തന്നെ ദോഷപ്പെടുത്തില്ല. ആത്മാവ് ദ്വന്ദ്വാതീതം; പിന്നെ ആരോടു കോപം?
The material body is dull matter and does not experience happiness, distress or anything else. Because the spirit soul is completely transcendental, he should fix his consciousness on the transcendental Lord, who is beyond material happiness and distress. It is only when transcendental consciousness falsely identifies with dull matter that the living entity imagines he is enjoying and suffering in the material world. This illusory identification of consciousness with matter is called false ego and is the cause of material existence.
This verse argues that blaming time alone is incomplete; duality is not truly caused by an external agent, and the wise person stops directing anger outward, seeing a deeper principle beyond mere time.
King Yadu inquired about the Avadhuta’s unusual peace and freedom; the Avadhuta responds by dismantling common blame—such as time or other people—and teaches transcendence of duality through higher understanding.
When disturbed, pause before blaming people or circumstances; reflect on how reactions arise from conditioned perception, and practice steadiness through remembrance of the Self and devotion, reducing anger and reactivity.