Vyadha Gita

The Bhagavata Purana mentions the vyadha as an example of someone who attained perfection through satsang (association with devotees of Lord Vishnu or Krishna).

[1] The story begins with a young sannyasi going to a forest, where he meditates and practices spiritual austerities for a long time.

After years of practice, one day while sitting under a tree, dry leaves fall on his head because of a fight between a crow and a crane.

[8] The vyadha advises that all work must be done by "dedicating to God"[8] and by sincere and unattached performance of the allotted duty one can become illumined.

[3][5] The vyadha advises the sannyasi that ahimsa (non-violence) and satya (truth) are two main pillars of dharma through which the highest good of all can be achieved.

[12] Philosopher Swami Vivekananda, describes the Vyadha Gita in one of his lectures in Karma Yoga and says that it contains one of the "highest flights of the Vedanta".