Nee illu Ekkado Telusa – “నీ ఇల్లు ఎక్కడో తెలుసా” || Telugu Folk Song
Core Theme
This is a philosophical folk song addressed to the mind (మనసా — “O Mind”), urging it to wake up from the illusions of worldly life and confront the ultimate truth: death and impermanence.
Verse-by-Verse Interpretation
🏠 “Your real home is the cremation ground”
ఇల్లు ఇల్లు అంటావు… అల్లంత దూరాన వల్లకాడులోనా నీ ఇల్లు ఉన్నదే
The song opens with a striking paradox — you celebrate your house, but your true final home is the crematorium. It’s a blunt, poetic way of saying: everything you call “mine” is temporary.
👜 “You came with nothing, you’ll leave with nothing”
వచ్చునాడు నీవు వెంటేమి తెచ్చేవు… పోవునాడు నీవు తీసుకెళ్ళేదేమిటీ
A timeless philosophical question — birth and death are both empty-handed events. All accumulation in between is borrowed, not owned.
👨👩👧 “Don’t get attached to family”
ఆలు బిడ్డలనుచూ అన్నదమ్ములనుచూ ఆరాటపడబోకు మనసా
This isn’t coldness — it’s wisdom. The song warns that on the day you die, even your closest family will hesitate to touch your body. Love is real, but clinging to relationships as permanent is a delusion.
💰 “Why fight over wealth?”
ఆస్తిపాస్తుల కొరకూ అస్తమానం నీవు కుస్తీలు పట్టేవు మనసా
You spend your entire life wrestling (కుస్తీలు పట్టేవు) over property and possessions — things that are inherently unstable (అస్థిరములు). Why guard what cannot last?
🫁 “Once your breath is gone, even your wife and children step back”
ఊపిరి పోగానే భార్యాబిడ్డలు కూడా నిను తాక జంకుతారు మనసా
Perhaps the most emotionally raw line. The people who loved you most will fear your corpse. It’s not cruelty — it’s the stark truth of mortality that the mind refuses to accept while alive.
🌌 “How significant are you in this universe?”
విశ్వాన నీవెంతా? నీ పేరు ఎంతెంత?
Don’t be arrogant about your status or fame. In the vastness of the cosmos, your name and achievements are infinitesimally small. Wake up (మేలుకో).
🙏 “Even your own body will abandon you”
నీదన్న దేహమే నిన్ను కాదనిపోవూ… నీదనేదేదికా మనసా
The most intimate thing you possess — your own body — will one day reject you. If even that isn’t truly yours, what can you claim ownership of?
🕊️ “Pray to the unseen, eternal God”
పుట్టుక లేనివాడు కళ్ళకు కనపడనివాడు దైవమున్నాడు ఓ మనసా
The song closes with a turn toward the divine — one who was never born and cannot be seen. In a life full of impermanence, surrender to the eternal is presented as the only meaningful act.
Overall Message
IllusionTruthThis house is mineYour real home is the graveFamily will always be thereThey cannot follow you in deathWealth gives securityIt is all unstableYour name mattersYou are tiny in the universeYour body is yoursIt will leave youLiterary & Cultural Context
This song belongs to the Telugu Vairāgya (వైరాగ్య) tradition — devotional-philosophical folk poetry that preaches detachment from the material world. It echoes the spirit of saints like Vemana, Kabir, and Tyagaraja, who used simple, direct language to shake the common person out of worldly sleep.
The repeated address “మనసా” (O Mind) is a classical device — the poet speaks to their own mind, making it both personal and universal.
It is, at its heart, a song not about despair — but about waking up before it’s too late.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JFcdxd5124Y
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