Kṛṣṇa’s Impending Departure; Uddhava’s Surrender; King Yadu and the Avadhūta’s Twenty-Four Gurus
Beginnings
दृष्ट्वा तान् लुब्धक: कश्चिद् यदृच्छातो वनेचर: । जगृहे जालमातत्य चरत: स्वालयान्तिके ॥ ६३ ॥
dṛṣṭvā tān lubdhakaḥ kaścid yadṛcchāto vane-caraḥ jagṛhe jālam ātatya carataḥ svālayāntike
Noong sandaling iyon, may isang mangangaso na nagkataong gumagala sa gubat at nakita ang mga batang kalapati na gumagalaw malapit sa kanilang pugad. Inilatag niya ang lambat at nahuli silang lahat.
In this verse, the birds become vulnerable to capture when they remain together near a fixed place, illustrating how attachment and complacency invite bondage and suffering.
Śukadeva narrates this episode as part of the Avadhūta’s teachings, using a simple forest scene to show how material desire (greed) and attachment create the conditions for entrapment.
Reduce blind attachment to comforts, possessions, and group pressure; stay alert to “nets” like addictions and greed, and cultivate detachment and purposeful living centered on dharma and bhakti.