Paramahaṁsa-Dharma: The Avadhūta-like Sannyāsī and Prahlāda’s Dialogue with the ‘Python’ Saint
क्वचित्स्नातोऽनुलिप्ताङ्ग: सुवासा: स्रग्व्यलङ्कृत: । रथेभाश्वैश्चरे क्वापि दिग्वासा ग्रहवद्विभो ॥ ४१ ॥
kvacit snāto ’nuliptāṅgaḥ suvāsāḥ sragvy alaṅkṛtaḥ rathebhāśvaiś care kvāpi dig-vāsā grahavad vibho
Wahai Tuhanku, kadang-kadang aku mandi dengan elok, menyapu pes cendana pada tubuh, memakai pakaian indah, berkalung bunga dan berhias, lalu mengembara seperti raja di atas gajah, kereta atau kuda. Namun kadang-kadang aku berjalan telanjang seperti orang dirasuk.
This verse describes that a truly liberated soul may appear inconsistent externally—sometimes well-groomed and ornamented, sometimes naked and wandering—because he is beyond social identity and moves only under higher realization, like a planet following its course.
The comparison highlights steady, rule-governed movement without attachment: as planets move on their ordained paths, the realized renunciant moves through the world without being pulled by praise, blame, comfort, or discomfort.
Adopt the inner principle: perform duties without obsession over image and external validation, keep habits simple, and cultivate steadiness in devotion so that circumstances do not disturb your spiritual purpose.