Hello TSS,
We can also Reply as under to such questions.
Lord Krishna was in Gokulam and Brindavan in the first 10 years of his age.
A boy of 10 years doing such funs are purely not related to Ordinary people's game of love or so.All Gopikas were embodiment of Krishna Bhagthi.So no motives.
Alwan
It also has another meaning.To get rid of body consciousness to able to reach God.
Body consciousness is one of the hardest to get rid of cos as long we are identified with the body we are still bound.
That whole episode needs to be viewed with that concept in mind.
Symbolic Meaning Of Krishna's Taking Away The Clothes Of The Gopikas
"Another complaint Gopikas made (to mother Yashoda) was "When they were bathing in the river, he (Krishna) gathered all our Saris and went and sat on the top of a tree and would not come down even if we call him.' To this Krishna said: 'When they were bathing, there was big whirlwind, which gathered all these saris and put them on the tree.' Here, the whirlwind has to be identified as a form of God. The basic elements of creation are earth, fire, water, air and sky, and air is one form of the Divine. In truth, the Gopikas had very sacred heart." "God is one who is attracted by pure minds. The meaning of saying that he (Krishna) took away all the clothes is that he took away all your bodily attachments. The clothes are a cover to the body and in reality, the body is an attachment or a cover for the Atma that is residing inside the same. The body is therefore only a dress for this life. When we say that one is dead, we mean that the body is dead and discarded. Thus, it is to be interpreted as saying that so long as you have attachment to your body, you cannot find the real aspect of the Atma. We should not be under an illusion about the importance of the body."
Sai Baba, Summer Showers, 1978, p. 123
"The real meaning of story about Krishna taking away the clothes of the Gopikas while they were bathing is that to realise the Lord, they have to abandon the attachment to the body, which is the vesture of the spirit. These stories should not be treated in a spirit of levity or profanity."
Sai Baba, SS, 10/96, p. 257