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new births. It can also be asked if it is proper to abandon what is given in the
 
new births. It can also be asked if it is proper to abandon what is given in the
 
Vedas. Sri Krsna replies to these questions in next verses.
 
Vedas. Sri Krsna replies to these questions in next verses.
 +
 +
2.45
 +
trai-gunya-visaya veda nis-trai-gunyo bhav-arjuna
 +
nir-dvandvo nitya-sattva-sthah: niryoga-ksema atmavan
 +
"The Vedas prescribe for all the three qualities found in men. O Arjuna, become
 +
apart from these three modes. Be free from all dualities and from all anxieties
 +
for gain and preservation, and
 +
be established in the self."
 +
In the 42nd, 43rd and 44th slokas it was told that some learn Vedas and argue that
 +
swarga or heaven is the ultimate to be attained. Sri Krishna tells Arjuna that he
 +
should ignore karmas in the Vedas that yield the smaller rewards like swarga and
 +
concentrate to attain Moksham or Vaikunta Prapthi. Arjuna asked which are those
 +
karmas he should ignore. Sri Krishna intended the karmas like Jyotish Homam, etc.
 +
All these karmas yield swarga prapthi or begetting children or destroying enemies
 +
and so on. Sri Krishna wants Arjuna to set his objective on the superior Moksham
 +
and not on these trivial rewards. Arjuna now asks after all these karmas, which
 +
are intended for swarga etc., are also prescribed in Vedas, then how can he ignore
 +
them? Vedas have recommended these acts and Vedas will never advocate wrong
 +
things. It is said that what good a thousand mothers and fathers cannot do to a
 +
person, Vedas do to us. Vedas will never cheat us. So how can we disregard acts or
 +
karmas prescribed in Vedas? The second question is, we have to follow all the
 +
commands in the Vedas. We are to faithfully follow the instructions in the
 +
Shastras and perform the dos and avoid the don ts. These � karmas resulting in
 +
swarga are prescribed in shastras and so how can Sri Krishna ask to ignore these
 +
karmas? Once we start ignoring such commands of Vedas, soon we will discard all
 +
the acts prescribed in the Vedas. Thus the two questions :one Vedas speak only
 +
truth and will never divert anyone to wrong path and so how can anyone ignore any
 +
commands in Vedas. Second, by saying that one should not do karmas for achieving
 +
swarga, though prescribed in the Vedas, will not the defect of disobeying Vedas
 +
occur? This also will lead to discrimination and discarding the entire Vedas. If
 +
the rewards like heaven are of such an impermanent nature then why do the Vedas
 +
which are
 +
eternally perfect and beneficial for all beings enjoin practices aimed at
 +
achieving heavenly spheres.These doubts of Arjuna are responded in the 45th and
 +
46th slokas.
 +
Vedas is not just for one category of people, but for everybody! i.e it includes
 +
everybody who have the three qualities (sattva, rajas, tamas). But, you Arjuna,
 +
should get away from
 +
rajah and tamas guna and be placed in the Sattva platform only. Here we see the
 +
word traigunya indicating the three qualities of material nature being goodness,
 +
passion and ignorance.
 +
This term refers to the three groups of living entities characterised under the
 +
influence of these three aforementioned qualities. Vedic scriptures deals with the
 +
three modes of material nature which are goodness, passion and ignorance and all
 +
beings are born into these three modes of material nature. Some beings have a
 +
preponderance for goodness, others for passion and others for ignorance while some
 +
are mixed. These modes are conditioned within the mind and they typify the three
 +
types of created beings. With exception of the Upanisads the Vedic scriptures
 +
dealing with the three modes gives prescribed activities and their results.
 +
If the Vedic scriptures did not address these three classes according to their
 +
predilections by prescribing the appropriate method for attainment of the heavenly
 +
spheres, then those living entities under the influence of passion and ignorance
 +
would be adverse to goodness unwittingly hindering their own progress. Also they
 +
would be in the dark as to how to advance themselves from their present position
 +
and being lost compounded by being full of desires they would fall into
 +
degradation falsely fancying it to lead the way to their goal; and in vain they
 +
would be ruined.
 +
Whatsoever one desires to obtain in heaven the prescription is enjoined for them
 +
to achieve it and the description of the various rewards are eulogised as well as
 +
the rituals for their fulfilment. If the Vedas were not to reveal and elaborate a
 +
way for those within the three modes to benefit themselves according to the three
 +
modes of material nature. Then those locked in the cycle of birth and death would
 +
forfeit both their opportunities. Firstly unaware of the reward of liberation
 +
beyond the three modes and thus being oblivious to it would miss it altogether and
 +
secondly if their was no material goal which they could strive for they would lose
 +
faith in spiritual knowledge without rituals and practices giving them the means
 +
to acquire their cherished goals such as heavenly delights and thus they would
 +
lose both chances bequeathed to them with birth into material existence. So it is
 +
justly so that the Vedic scriptures deal with the three modes of material nature
 +
as they explain the rituals that bring benefits for all those subject to the
 +
influence of these modes.
 +
For example, imagine a person having no faith in Vedas. He wanted to get rid of
 +
his enemy but could not succeed. He came across a Vedic scholar and he sought the
 +
scholar�s advice. He recommended sena yagna. This person though not believing in
 +
Vedas, wanted to give that advice a try. His enemy was vanquished. Then he wanted
 +
money and this time scholar recommended another karma and after performing that
 +
wealth accumulated. Now, this person slowly started having faith in the Vedas. As
 +
time passed, his desires also multiplied and every time he resorted to various
 +
karmas in the Vedas and sincerely performed and got satisfied. He aspired for
 +
swarga and got it. But later found that also was limited and so sought the advice
 +
of Vedic scholars for permanent happiness free from all miseries. He realized
 +
that Karma yoga or Gyana yoga or Bhakthi yoga would yield Moksham. This method was
 +
required to correct a non-believer. This method is not applicable to people like
 +
Arjuna who have already surrendered to the Lord. Therefore, Sri Krishna tells
 +
Arjuna that the Vedas are meant for all three types-satva, rajo and tamo- of
 +
persons.
 +
Imagine a mother having three children. One is very submissive and good mannered.
 +
The second is a rough and arrogant. Third one is lazy. The mother is common to all
 +
the three. The
 +
methods used by the mother to get things done from each child will vary. For
 +
example if the first child tries to eat something that should be avoided, a mere
 +
warning will do. Whereas for
 +
the second child, the mother will allow the child to eat and later on when the
 +
child complains of stomach disorder, she would give the advice and correct to
 +
avoid such foods. This example
 +
is quoted by Pillai Lokacharya and his brother Azhgiya Manavalaperumal
 +
Nayanar.Now, the first child cannot complain that the mother was partial and she
 +
allowed the other child to eat
 +
that avoidable food. So, Vedas being common to all sorts of people, that is,
 +
variety of people endowed with satva, rajo and tamo guanas, the Lord cannot ask
 +
the same karma to be
 +
performed by all.
 +
Hence the Vedic scriptures contain all that the three classification of living
 +
entities possessing different qualities could desire. But ideally one should free
 +
themselves from passion and ignorance and devote oneself to increasing the
 +
quality of goodness fully. This increase should be pure without any dilution of
 +
passion and ignorance all intermixture should be fully purged. The word
 +
nirdvandvah means free from duality, devoid of any influence of material nature.
 +
Nitya-sattva-sthah is one who is ever wedded to increasing goodness without any
 +
trace of passion and ignorance. How is this to be accomplished? By being niryoga-
 +
ksema meaning one is completely unconcerned about acquiring any other
 +
advantage apart from the realisation of the soul and the means to effect that
 +
end. By this method one becomes atmavan or established in the soul. If one
 +
conducts oneself in this manner and remains fixed, the influence of passion and
 +
ignorance
 +
will cease and goodness will become predominant.
 +
It may be put forth that one may become indifferent to heavenly delights but that
 +
the basic requirements for human existence such as food, clothing and shelter
 +
which are also veritable modifications of the three modes of material nature are
 +
impossible to ignore and become indifferent too. In answer to this Lord Krishna
 +
explains to be free from dualities like praise and blame, heat and cold, pleasure
 +
and pain. Being free from them means being unattached to them. How is this to be
 +
done? By enduring them and becoming established in pure spiritual consciousness.
 +
Its characteristic is patience and endurance uninfluenced by passion or covered by
 +
ignorance. One should always be tempered by patience for one without patience is
 +
easily overpowered by passion and ignorance and becomes uncontrolled and fearful
 +
in situations involving the three modes of material nature. So we should overcome
 +
the hindrances of passion and ignorance and maintain a balanced state of
 +
equilibrium.
 +
But in all this one with worldly possessions desirous of increasing and protecting
 +
them may wonder how they may maintain themselves in the material nature. To this
 +
Lord Krishna reiterates niryoga-ksema become free from conceptions of acquisition
 +
and preservation. But how then would one sustain their lives? By atmavan firmly
 +
established in spiritual consciousness of the soul. The essence is to understand
 +
that the Supreme Lord is the fulfiller and bestower of all desires. So one should
 +
only seek His refuge and accept His shelter. Never fear nor seek any other succour
 +
from any other source for the Supreme Lord will provide all sustenance and
 +
maintenance to those who understanding Him are fully surrendered.
 +
Nirdvandva: Dvandam is duality. Nirdvandam is non-duality. What is it? We see
 +
everything in pairs : Happiness-Sorrow, Birth-death; Gain-Loss etc (we have seen
 +
in earlier sloka on
 +
how to bear duality.. suka dukha samey krtva, laabah-Alaabah , Jaya-Ajayau). So,
 +
Nirdvanda moksham is treat this duality as equal and bear with equanimity. We have
 +
to train ourselves to
 +
pass these pairs. Another intepretation is, we see duality in this life only. So
 +
bypassing this samsaram or lifecycles, and reaching Moksham. So our aim is to
 +
achieve nirdvandvo. But in our
 +
daily life we come across these pairs regularly and react accordingly! Isn't it
 +
extremely difficult! How can we avoid these pairs then?
 +
nis-trai-gunyo:This is explained in the next words in the 45th sloka. In the
 +
beginning of this sloka He told that Arjuna should be without the three gunas or
 +
qualities. This does NOT mean that
 +
Arjuna should be without all the three-satva, rajo and tamo qualities; but avoid
 +
rajo and tamo gunas alone. So a person without the three gunas- that is without
 +
the rajo and tamo qualitiescan
 +
passover the dualities or pairs or become nirdvandvo. We feel we are attacked
 +
by the pairs of victory-defeat, happiness-sorrow and profit-loss, because of the
 +
inherent rajo and tamo
 +
qualities.
 +
nitya-sattva-sthah: By training ourselves in satva guna, we can resist the impact
 +
of the pairs. The pairs cannot be avoided in our lives, we should remember, but we
 +
can avoid the influence
 +
of them on us. Just as we cannot avoid mosquitoes but we guard ourselves against
 +
mosquito bite by various methods. Sri Krishna also suggests two methods to resist
 +
the influence of the
 +
pairs on us. One, by avoiding the trigunya or discarding rajo and tamo qualities.
 +
The second is to cultivate the satva quality in us. This two-pronged approach will
 +
enable us to overcome the
 +
impact of the pairs. Now Arjuna asks Sri Krishna how to identify these three
 +
qualities in him and how to manage them? Sri Krishna smiled, as these qualities
 +
are not physically
 +
identifiable. But He suggests a method for that also.
 +
niryoga-ksema : He says one should be niryoga-ksema atmavan. In Sanskrit yogam
 +
means receiving what is not possessed. Kshemam means protecting what is possessed.
 +
Here
 +
Sri Krishna advises that other than atman, do not aspire to possess anything else
 +
and do not desire to retain what is possessed. Desireless on yoga kshemam,
 +
excepting atman, will
 +
make one nistrai-gunyo and nitya-sattva-stho. Because the desire to acquire makes
 +
us to employ our rajo guna. We get angry with all those impeding our desire. On
 +
the other hand,
 +
if we can discard that desire to acquire, then there is no room for passion, anger
 +
and jealousy. Niryogakshema will reduce rajo and tamo qualities.
 +
Atmavan- What about cultivating satva quality? that is always be thoughtful of the
 +
atman. This will grow satva quality and we can easily resist the influence of the
 +
pairs.
 +
Summarizing, atmavan and niryogakshema will make one nistraigunyo and nithya
 +
satvo. This will make one nirdvandvo, which is essential to reach Moksham. The
 +
elimination of rajo and tamo qualities and developing satva quality depend on our
 +
food habits.
 +
2.46
 +
yaavan artha udapaane sarvatah: samplutohdakE
 +
taavan sarveshu vedesu brahmanasya vijanatah
 +
In the preceding sloka Sri Krishna advised Arjuna to contemplate on the atman only
 +
and to discard passion to acquire or retain material benefits. By doing these
 +
Arjuna can eliminate rajo and
 +
tamo qualities and develop satva quality. This will result Arjuna being immune to
 +
the pairs happiness and sorrow, victory and defeat and gain � or loss. Arjuna is
 +
commanded to take
 +
initiatives to achieve these. Arjuna has doubts, that when everything is
 +
mentioned in vedas, why should Krishna tell him to ignore the material benefits
 +
provided by Vedas and select
 +
what is related to Brahman? Vedas are supreme. Isn't it? Why should Vedas tell
 +
it and then Krishna is telling to ignore it? Why doesn't the Vedas provide only
 +
what is ultimate, instead
 +
of giving Swargam, Putra Kameshti Yagnam and other tips (rituals etc) which are
 +
for material benefits? The reason is, ALL of us are living in a material plane
 +
and each one of us (except
 +
very rare exceptions) have some desire or other (whether it is wealth, property,
 +
Son, knowledge etc), so Vedas are kind to help us in this process. Krishna is
 +
repeating that this desires
 +
will keep us in a endless cycle of material world and that we should focus on
 +
getting out of this, by taking the appropriate portions of Vedas. This
 +
continuous exhortation will atleast help
 +
a few of us to realize it and stop chasing more new material desires and limit our
 +
existing desires Or atleast realize the importance giving attention to the needs
 +
of the soul. Also Krishna is
 +
telling Arjuna not to consider what the vedas are telling for all, but just focus
 +
on what Krishna is telling him. Now citing an example Sri Krishna tells in the
 +
46th sloka:
 +
"Water in a reservoir is common to all kinds of people and purposes and at all
 +
times. Similarly, all the Vedas serve all and brahmana selects the one needed by
 +
him."
 +
Sri Krishna says that His commands in the Vedas are for all types of people, just
 +
as a mother is common to her various children. So, Arjuna should pick up what is
 +
applicable to him. He now
 +
cites an example. Let us consider river Ganges or Kaveri or a large lake where
 +
water from various rivers is stored. There are many ghats in the river or lake.
 +
People of various requirements
 +
are at these ghats. One wants to get his thirst quenched. Another wants to have a
 +
bath, and so on. Even for the person who wants to quench his thirst, he can take
 +
water to the extent he
 +
needs. Also, he can drink the quantity his palms can collect. One cannot complain
 +
that he is not drinking all the water in the river or lake, just because so much
 +
water is available. Because,
 +
he has to take water to the extent to quench the thirst only and cannot take more.
 +
He also cannot complain that there should be water in the river to his requirement
 +
only. The water in the
 +
river or lake is meant for all and at all times. Also, the water is required for
 +
not only drinking but for other uses also. Similarly the commands in the Vedas are
 +
for all types of people with
 +
various degree of the triguna satva, rajo and tamo qualities. � Vedas are also
 +
meant for the people in various eras or yugas �kritha, thretha, dwapara and kali
 +
yugas. It is also meant
 +
for persons at various stages in life like bramhachari [bachelor], grahastha
 +
[familied persons], vanaprastha [secluded life] and sanyasi [renounced]. It is
 +
meant for both males and females,
 +
young and old, learned and the ignorant. So, everyone should accept what is
 +
suited or prescribed for him. Sri Krishna now advises Arjuna not to resort to some
 +
karmas as he is not
 +
suited for those. Arjuna is having the satva quality and the other two �rajo and
 +
tamo- are absent in him. Arjuna should fight to establish dharma. At the same
 +
time, he should not fight
 +
to gain inferior rewards like swarga, but for obtaining Moksham. He should not
 +
fight for acquiring the kingdom or for enjoying regal comforts. Besides, Arjuna
 +
being His cousin,
 +
who else could be dearer to be preached to cultivate satva quality? Thus, Sri
 +
Krishna preached that Moksham was the appropriate path for Arjuna in this
 +
juncture.
 +
We may not be in the same high level as Arjuna and so it may be difficult to
 +
relinquish our desires. We can write down our desires and review them periodically
 +
to see whether we have
 +
renounced any as preached in Gita. We can also note the dos and don�ts, Sri
 +
Krishna has advised and review all those where we have drifted away from His
 +
advice.
 +
Small progresses achieved are great steps in the path Sri Krishna has shown to us.
 +
Sri Krishna further says that all the Vedas prescribe the karmas for all types of
 +
people and a brahmana should follow those suitable and applicable to him. Here the
 +
word brahmana does not
 +
indicate a Brahmin as a caste member. Any person who is desirous of reaching the
 +
Brahman as mentioned in the Vedas is addressed as Brahmana. Such persons should
 +
follow the
 +
commands in Vedas, which will take them to the Paramatman. All other destinations
 +
should be treated as mere impediments in reaching Moksham and they should be
 +
avoided.
 +
Any karma, which takes one to swarga or other worlds for enjoyment, will prevent
 +
the person from reaching Moksham till that tenure was over and to that extent they
 +
become
 +
obstacles in the path for eternal happiness. Avoid all those objectives of
 +
inferior results. They are the techniques of rajo and tamo quality persons. So
 +
advices Sri Krishna
 +
and induces Arjuna to fight for dharma with Moksham as the end result.
 +
It must be understood that not everything written in the Vedic scriptures is
 +
necessary for all the three classifications of living entities. Some injunctions
 +
apply only to those possessing qualities
 +
of passion and ignorance and some apply only to those solely possessing the
 +
qualities of goodness. The rituals and sacrifices mentioned in the karma-kanda
 +
division of the Vedic literature
 +
are to encourage gradual development of self-realization. And the purpose of selfrealization
 +
is clearly stated in the Fifteenth Chapter of the Bhagavad-gita
 +
(15.15): the purpose of studying the
 +
Vedas is to know Lord Krsna, the primeval cause of everything. So, selfrealization
 +
means understanding Krsna and one's eternal relationship with Him.One
 +
should follow that portion of the
 +
Vedas to perform activities that are most pleasing to Lord Krishna which is in the
 +
best interests of all beings. It is not that one must just adopt everything that
 +
is said in the Vedas. One should
 +
never do activities against the injunctions of the Vedic scriptures but according
 +
to qualification and circumstances one must follow what is prescribed in the
 +
Vedas. For example certain rituals
 +
such as the agnihotra are prescribed to be performed in the Vedas; but they are
 +
prescribed for married householders. They are not to be performed by sannyasis.
 +
Also celibacy is prescribed
 +
in the Vedic scriptures but it is prescribed for brahmacaris and sannyasis. It is
 +
not prescribed for married householders. So it is not that everything in the Vedas
 +
is to be followed by everyone
 +
although all the four orders must certainly follow the Vedas but according to ones
 +
ashram. This is the discrimination regarding this matter. Lord Krishna gives the
 +
example here that just as a
 +
great reservoir of water answers the purpose of a well and when water is flowing
 +
to the brim on all sides there is only a small amount required to one thirsty to
 +
allay their thirst in the same
 +
way only that much need be taken from the Vedic scriptures as may be required.
 +
Hence it can be clearly ascertained that from all the Vedic scriptures only that
 +
which leads to the realisation
 +
of the Ultimate Truth needs to be chosen by those who are in complete knowledge.
 +
What is then necessary for one in goodness aspiring for this is revealed in the
 +
next verse.
 +
2.47
 +
karmany eva-adhikaras te ma phalesu kadacana
 +
ma karma-phala-hetur bhu: ma te sango astv akarmani
 +
"You have ONLY right to perform your prescribed duty, but you have no rights for
 +
the fruits of action. Never consider yourself the cause of the results of your
 +
activities, and never be inactive."
 +
This sloka is very sweet to listen to but most difficult to follow in practice.
 +
Why Sri Krishna told this sloka and what is the connection to the previous sloka?
 +
In the earlier slokas 45 & 46, Krishna mentioned to Arjuna that , he can't take
 +
everything in Vedas and follow it, since Vedas is like a river and for everybody.
 +
But, just like we use river
 +
water as per our individual use, Arjuna should use those aspects of veda, which
 +
is specifically suited to him i.e. he should follow the sattvic ones (ones which
 +
reach him to brahman and
 +
not the ones which are for material desires). Arjuna has a question here -
 +
Krishna is telling him to pick specific part of vedas - So, can Arjuna ignore what
 +
he doesn't feel like?
 +
This is a challenge. Sri Krishna is advising him to discard some commands of
 +
Vedas. So can he discard any? If someone is asked to follow all in a book then
 +
there is no problem. But if same person is told that some in that book are not
 +
meant for him, then he thinks that he has the discretion to choose any and discard
 +
some, as he likes. There are so many daily karmas prescribed like the simple ones:
 +
speak the truth, do not steal, etc. These are also prescribed in the Vedas. Can
 +
anyone discard these basic tenets also? Can we discard daily routines like Pooja
 +
for the God? So, there is every possibility of total confusion in following Vedas.
 +
Also whichever karma is being performed, the objective will always be lingering in
 +
mind. As a reply to all these doubts, Sri Krishna mentions this 47th sloka. He
 +
says, Arjuna has right to do ONLY his karma . ONLY(te) emphasizes that he has no
 +
RIGHT on the RESULTS. He says,
 +
"phalesu" -> numerous results/fruits. arjuna should not be thinking he has any
 +
right on all the numerous fruits.
 +
Karma-Phala->results of the work; hetur->responsible/ownership; ma-bhuh->do not :
 +
Do not think you are the cause for the results.
 +
Akarmani-> Never be inactive. Ma-teh-Sangah-Astu -> Do not associate :
 +
Do not associate anytime with inactivity.
 +
You have only Right for doing your presribed duty; You have no right for the
 +
fruits of the action
 +
Do not think that you are the cause of the results of your activities; But,at
 +
the same time, do not ever associate with inactivity.
 +
This is very difficult to understand. Every thing we do, again, everything we do
 +
-> even simple acts such as turning on TV is with the expectation for some result
 +
or working for
 +
money .. everything we do is with expectation for result. So, why is Krishna
 +
saying like this? Even a dull-headed person will not move a finger unless some
 +
results are there. So it might surprise us as to why Sri Krishna is advising like
 +
this. We should note that Sri Krishna does not say Arjuna should do without
 +
expecting any results. Actually we should link this with the previous sloka and
 +
understand that one should contemplate on atman and making the atman to reach
 +
Moksham alone should be the result we should expect in every karma performed. Sri
 +
Krishna is not saying that we should not aspire for results, but asks not to
 +
desire for inferior rewards but aspire to reach the Paramatman for all our
 +
actions.
 +
In the next line of the sloka it is said that Arjuna should not be the cause of
 +
any results. We are to perform the action and even though we may not aspire for a
 +
result, unless we perform, the
 +
results are not going to be there. If in a game the player is asked not to bother
 +
about results, the player may ponder as to why he should play. What Sri Krishna
 +
means, when He says that
 +
one should not be the cause for a result, is that one should not think that one
 +
was responsible for the results.
 +
Inaction should not be there. Result may or may not be but when we do a karma we
 +
should think that we are not doing that karma for an inferior reward and we should
 +
never think that we are responsible for that reward. Arjuna then feels that
 +
instead of this elaboration, he could as well remain passive and thereby avoid any
 +
result. This Sri Krishna prohibits. Arjuna cannot sit idle; he has to fight in the
 +
battle. But he should not desire for swarga or victory.
 +
Let us delve into why Sri Krishna is advising that we should not expect or desire
 +
for results. We should be clear first as to what we need in this world. If we
 +
frequently change our needs we can never reach the destination. Our objective
 +
should be that beyond which there is nothing else, that which will give us
 +
everlasting experience and that which will yield supreme feeling. The experience
 +
in this world indicates to us that happiness and sorrow are mixed. Therefore we
 +
have to elevate ourselves to higher planes and reach Paramatman for everlasting
 +
pleasure. This should be our objective. This is not small happiness. This will
 +
never be lost or decay. It is not going to end after some time. Once we have
 +
decided on this aim, all our actions should be targeted to reach this goal only.
 +
Any deviation in this will make us miss the objective. Any action for any other
 +
target will only waste our time and energy. This is what Sri Krishna explains to
 +
Arjuna. He should do his duty and that only is going to realize him the
 +
Paramatman. We have to perform duties prescribed for us. We have to do our duties.
 +
Follow the righteous path. Speak the truth. Be helpful to others. Do not malign
 +
others. Cultivate the real traits of atman. By doing all these we will follow the
 +
path shown by Sri Krishna and surely we will secure the results He indicated. We
 +
can do these acts like speaking truth only or following righteous path, for other
 +
benefits also. As an example digging to create a pond for the benefit of the
 +
society is a righteous act. By doing so one may get position or wealth. But if the
 +
same person can also think that by doing this act, he is going to make available
 +
water for many devotees in whom He resides and so this will please Paramatman and
 +
so He will receive him to His Domain. So a choice exists. We can perform a
 +
commendable act for smaller rewards like position or wealth, or for sublime
 +
rewards like pleasing the God. We should choose the latter. Here, Sri Krishna is
 +
encouraging Arjuna to fight to reach Moksham. Arjuna should have his aim as
 +
reaching the feet of the Lord and fight in the battle.
 +
That is why Sri Krishna tells that Arjuna has right only for the duty- karmanyeva.
 +
Now, Arjuna enquires that if Sri Krishna is telling that he is not the cause for
 +
results of his action, then will not the normal concept of relation between cause
 +
and action be faulted? It appears that what Sri Krishna tells is against our daily
 +
observations. If a person hits a person and is produced in a court, he cannot
 +
escape punishment by saying that he was not responsible for the injury suffered by
 +
the other. So one can never runaway from the results of an action. If the battle
 +
is won, it will mean that Arjuna was responsible for that victory. If this is not
 +
accepted then it will result in a mindless act. Result and action have to be
 +
always together only. Then why Sri Krishna is advising the other way? Swami
 +
Ramanuja in his Gita Bhashyam and Swami Vedantha Desika in his Tatparya Chandrika
 +
explain these. In karmanyeva adhikara, the word adhikara indicates the thought
 +
mine or I am doing . Where this thought should be and where � � � � it should not be?
 +
When one is doing his duty he should have this thought that it is his duty and
 +
that he is doing his duty. So this right � adhikara- and the thought that right is
 +
being exercised should be there while performing one�s duty. But when a result is
 +
there he should not claim it as a right and be inert to the results. Sri Krishna
 +
therefore does not say that cause and action are not related. He only says that
 +
while doing a duty, one cannot claim one was responsible for the result. If in the
 +
battle Arjuna wins it is no doubt that Arjuna was responsible for that. But he
 +
should never think that he is responsible for the outcome. With the feeling that
 +
one is not responsible for the result, one should do a duty. This feeling is quite
 +
difficult to bring to practice. The advantages of such a feeling are brought out
 +
in the next sloka. We should perform our duty for superior goal and at the same
 +
time we should always remember that we are not responsible for the end results. If
 +
we are not responsible for the results of our action, why should we do any action?
 +
Why not remain inactive? Sri Krishna says that He never said that we are not
 +
responsible for the results, but commands that we should not perform our duty with
 +
the thought that we are responsible for the results. Arjuna asks what is wrong if
 +
he assumed or thought that he was responsible for the results? Sri Krishna
 +
counters Arjuna whether could he ever say that for any result of any action, he
 +
alone was responsible? For any action it is the teamwork, which gets results. In
 +
the Shastras it is said that for any action five entities are needed. They are
 +
Paramatma, Jeevatma, body, organs and Pranavayu [Oxygen]. Team effort of all these
 +
only can result in any action. When this is the position, how can anyone claim
 +
that he has done? So there is nothing wrong in assuming that he has not performed
 +
that action. Arjuna accepting this asks whether he, being one of the five, can
 +
assume at least 20% was his contribution? Sri Krishna denies this and says that in
 +
this Universe everything perform to His orders and so it would be better to say
 +
that He was responsible for all actions. If we analyze we can realize that one
 +
alone is not responsible for any action.
 +
(Extract from Gita Bhashyam:
 +
Lord Krishna instructs Arjuna that for one who is fixed in goodness, whose sole
 +
aim is for liberation; the routine of performing daily duties, occasional duties
 +
and fruit bearing duties should be performed automatically and whatever recompense
 +
assigned to each of them should not be hankered for desiring rewards and benefits
 +
or else it becomes fruitive. The desire for reward and benefits has a binding
 +
effect keeping one bound in the material existence. But free from these
 +
impediments the same action performed as worship to the Supreme Lord becomes the
 +
veritable means to secure liberation. Therefore be devoid of motive for actions
 +
nor desire to reap the reward from actions. Though all living entities are acting
 +
their part in this world, those who are situated in goodness aspiring for
 +
liberation are considered not to be entangled as so. It can be understood that
 +
when one eats the hunger one had is appeased and the desire is satisfied as well;
 +
yet one would not consider theirself as the cause of the appeasal and
 +
satisfaction.
 +
)
 +
 +
2.48:
 +
yoga-sthah kuru karmani sangam tyaktva dhananjaya
 +
siddhy-asiddhyoh samo bhutva samatvam yoga ucyate
 +
"Perform your duty equipoised, O Arjuna, abandoning all attachment to success or
 +
failure. Such equanimity is called yoga."
 +
yoga-sthah--steadfast in yoga; kuru--perform; karmani--your duties; sangam--
 +
attachment; tyaktva--having abandoned; dhananjaya--O Dhananjaya; siddhiasiddhyoh--
 +
success and failure;
 +
samah--the same; bhutva--having become; samatvam--evenness of mind; yogah--yoga;
 +
ucyate--is called.
 +
Established in yoga and renouncing attachment to all accompanying results one
 +
should engage in actions as a matter of duty to the best of one's ability
 +
completely unconcerned with success
 +
and failure. This equipoised condition of the mind keeps it peaceful and steady in
 +
the face of all adversity and balanced and calm in the fulfilment of any actions.
 +
In this 48th sloka Sri Krishna mentions yoga. It means considering victory and
 +
defeat alike without differentiation. The person who attains such a mind of
 +
tranquility and in whom the mind is in
 +
harmony is called yogi. Arjuna should be one among such yogis. We see here a large
 +
tree and the big Anaimalai rock. They represent steadfastness. Nothing can shake
 +
these. Similarly we
 +
should also be firm. Just because others talk, we should not lose our heart. By
 +
desiring various rewards our weakness is exhibited. Today this is required,
 +
tomorrow we need that, if we do this
 +
we may get that reward, if we do that we may get a different reward- like this we
 +
are advised by so many people. By losing our minds and getting distracted we will
 +
become nervous.
 +
We should decide whether we want a strong mind or a weak one? By listening to all
 +
sorts of suggestions our mind gets weaker. We should firmly believe that whatever
 +
we need will all be
 +
granted by the Lord. The relationship between a devotee and God should not be
 +
commercial. Devotee has to establish his rights and God will certainly perform His
 +
duty. Both have duties
 +
and rights. Our resolute should be that we are devoted to Him and we will do only
 +
what pleases Him. Our objective is to reach Him. This must be our resolution. With
 +
this thought we should
 +
perform our duties. When this is done there is no need to establish our rights.
 +
God Himself will grant all those.
 +
When we do our duty we should have a resolute and balanced mind to either victory
 +
or defeat arising as a result of that karma. What is balanced approach to victory
 +
or defeat? Abandoning
 +
attachment sangam tyaktva-one should perform his duty. That is � we should be free
 +
from any attachment to the result of our action. Such detachment from result will
 +
enable the karma to be
 +
done properly. Here we have to see important aspects. In our daily life we notice
 +
that only if we have interest in the result, we get enthusiasm to perform a task.
 +
A student keeps his aim as
 +
securing 99% in the exam and this drives him to study harder. But what Sri Krishna
 +
is telling here is exact opposite. Don�t have attachment on the result, if the
 +
work is to be properly done.
 +
There appears to be contradiction to convention we notice in this world. Will not
 +
Sri Krishna�s advice induce laziness and indifference? We have to note here what
 +
is the result expected?
 +
By aiming for the ordinary worldly rewards, our efforts will be more by aspiring
 +
for those. But when we want to reach Him, we should be away from these petty
 +
rewards. We reap that only
 +
which we keep as objective in our mind. So the supreme goal of reaching His feet
 +
should be our aim and we should not care for other results. We can see some
 +
examples as how we can
 +
perform better by not attaching to the result. If a person�s father, let us say,
 +
has chest pain in the midnight. All relatives are crying. The person himself is
 +
totally agitated. In this state of mind the person is unable to find means to take
 +
his father to hospital. Just at that time as Godsend, the person�s friend comes
 +
and surveying the situation he does the correct actions to get the ambulance,
 +
doctor and medicines. The family is relieved from the misery. How the friend could
 +
make these arrangements while the person could not? Because in this case the
 +
person�s father was suffering and the attachment of the person to the patient
 +
could not enable the person to do what his friend could do. The friend on the
 +
other hand had no such attachments and his aim, a noble one, was to help his
 +
friend. Attachment brings in anxiety. While detachment ensured calm and quite
 +
approach. We might have kept important documents in a cabinet and if the keys are
 +
misplaced, we will find very difficult to search for the keys. This is because we
 +
know the importance of the document inside the cabinet and so the anxiousness to
 +
retrieve the documents will disable our proper approach. But a person not knowing
 +
the contents in the cabinet, will be able to find the keys and get the cabinet
 +
opened. We can see our cricket team. A player may be performing excellently. But
 +
when he is made the captain of the team, his performance goes down. Why? Because
 +
now his mind is on the results to get the team perform well, to ensure coherent
 +
approach, etc. This attachment to the result of team performing well disables the
 +
player and performance goes down. Some players in this type of situation also
 +
perform well, which means they have followed the principle enunciated in the Gita.
 +
So if we get attached to rewards then this balanced approach will not be there.
 +
2.49
 +
durena hy avaram karma buddhi-yogAd dhananjaya
 +
buddhau saranam anviccha kripanah phala-hetavah
 +
"Action with attachment is far inferior, O Arjuna, to action done with evenness of
 +
mind. Seek refuge in evenness of mind. Miserable are they who act with a motive
 +
for results."
 +
Earlier Krishna told that we have right only to do our duty. But when we perform a
 +
duty, it should not be mere an action. That is it should not be a mere ritual. Our
 +
intellect should also be
 +
associated with that karma. What type of intellect should be there? We are NOT
 +
doing this karma for trivial rewards but for a supreme purpose of Moksham. We
 +
should be having an equitable
 +
approach on the results arising out of the action. With such a mind the duty will
 +
be performed well. Without this thought in mind if the karma is done it will be
 +
mere ritual. So, our intellect forms
 +
an important part in karma. Sri Krishna shows the difference in a karma one does
 +
with this intellect and without. With such noble mind the karma is also noble.
 +
Without this sublime thought
 +
any action performed is regarded as very low. This will result in rebirths.
 +
A person who thinks he is responsible for swarga or victory/loss in karma, is a
 +
krupana or underprivileged and he is going to have rebirths. Whereas with the
 +
intellect that he is not responsible
 +
for the rewards, the karma is noble. An action performed without involving the
 +
intellect a mere ritual- is considered very inferior. So, Arjuna � is advised that
 +
applying his intellect in the action
 +
that he is not aspiring for trivial rewards like swarga, he should do his duty. He
 +
should resort to this type of understanding. The person who thinks he is
 +
responsible for rewards will have rebirth.
 +
So do the duty with the understanding that he is not responsible for the result
 +
and perform the duty. We have right only to do the karma and we should not aspire
 +
for results. Do the duty with
 +
the conscience that � I am not doing this karma�.The karma is to be done by Arjuna
 +
only and the rewards also will be for Arjuna. But while doing the karma he should
 +
do the duty with total
 +
detachment to the results. We can also see what happens if we do a work with
 +
conscience and without.
 +
A good example of this is the incident quoted in Srimad Bhagavatam on Krishna's
 +
request for food to Brahmans and when being refused, going to their wives with the
 +
same request.
 +
(Note that , this is just an example and it's important to understand the truth
 +
behind it and not just get stuck in the example, without understanding it's
 +
purport!)
 +
Though the Brahmins were learned and knew Sri Krishna as the God, they never
 +
applied their mind as to what for they were performing the yagna and who was to be
 +
appeased in the yagna. Thus they were doing karma without applying their
 +
intellect. The uneducated ladies on the other hand were so much devoted to Sri
 +
Krishna that they could not bear the feeling He was hungry and rushed. These women
 +
did not perform great yagnas but had the greatest devotion. Whereas the Brahmins
 +
daily performed yagna to invoke God. But they became mere ritual and so they never
 +
received His blessings. This was because the intellect that the yagna was being
 +
performed to please God and He Himself as Sri Krishna was asking for food, was
 +
missing. So mere learning is of no use and similarly, mere ritual also is waste.
 +
We also while chanting Sri Rama, Sri Krishna and Sri Govinda, should be conscious
 +
that these are His names and by uttering these we are pleasing Him and
 +
Namasankeerthanam [singing God�s names] is our duty. This will elevate the mere
 +
uttering to a noble karma.
 +
One performing actions with the thought of receiving rewards gets the desired
 +
resultant. This appears positive but it is repeatedly denounced. Why? Because
 +
actions performed due to selfish
 +
motives are inferior to actions performed due to selfless motives. Selfless
 +
motives are balanced in equanimity. Equanimity possesses a determinate
 +
consciousness. Because of this reality
 +
one should seek the shelter of evenness of mind in equanimity. Actions performed
 +
with fruitive motivations are far inferior to actions performed as a matter of
 +
duty. The mind of those whose actions are performed as a matter of duty are not
 +
disturbed or unbalanced by delusions of rewards gained or lost. The activities
 +
performed in spiritual intelligence removes all suffering in the world and leads
 +
to liberation from the material existence. Contrarily activities performed for the
 +
acquisition of rewards assuredly results in suffering and affliction in the
 +
material existence. Phala-hetavah are those who sole motivation is dictated be the
 +
prospects of reward. It should be understood that such living entities are krpanah
 +
or pitiable due to the fact but acting in this way they are imprisoned in the
 +
material existence unable to attain their spiritual nature.
 +
Thus, when an act is being done, take refuge in Buddhi (evenness of mind). Refuge
 +
means abode. Live in that buddhi, is the meaning. "miserable are they who act
 +
with a motive for
 +
results": it means, "those who act with attachment to the results etc are
 +
miserable and they will continue in samsara".
 +
For all living entities the Supreme Lord is the only refuge. When this realisation
 +
finally dawns upon the intellect of a living entity whether they are ignorant,
 +
wise or liberated they surrender unto
 +
the Supreme Lord without reservation. Those who in delusion consider themselves
 +
the same as the Supreme Lord Krishna who is distinctly different due to His
 +
inconceivable potencies and
 +
transcendental attributes, descend to the hellish worlds of darkness without a
 +
doubt. They are doomed to eternal damnation in hellish conditions.
 +
2.50
 +
buddhi-yukto jahatiha ubhe sukrita-duskrte
 +
tasmad yogaya yujyasva yogah karmasu kausalam
 +
After pointing out the defects of performing optional activities which are not
 +
essential, Lord Krishna extols the virtues of equanimity in that it neutralises
 +
all reactions without a doubt both positive and negative. Therefore everyone
 +
should make a diligent endeavour to achieve this consciousness of equanimity. For
 +
one expertly engaged in actions which do not incur reactions on their path to
 +
attain liberation form the material existence and the ultimate truth is the
 +
highest skill.
 +
A deed done for a sublime cause elevates the doer. If the deed is done with the
 +
thought that it would please God, it is Karma yoga. So while doing karma or deed,
 +
our intellect or buddhi has to be involved. The buddhi or understanding should be
 +
that we are not doing the karma for inferior rewards like swarga. The karma is not
 +
being done by us. This karma will please God. These thoughts or understandings are
 +
needed while doing any karma. Instead if it is done as a mere karma, it will
 +
engage the person in rebirths. The thought or understanding that we are doing
 +
karma as a devotion to Him and we have no ambition for swarga or material comforts
 +
in this world, will make God to grant Himself all our needs. When we request God
 +
for anything it would be limited but if God Himself grants it would be profuse.
 +
So, instead of praying God to grant this or that, we should leave all our
 +
requirements to His judgment and devote ourselves in His service. This is a basic
 +
tenet of Karma yoga.
 +
In the preceding 47th, 48th and 49th slokas, Sri Krishna explained the difference
 +
in mere karma as a ritual and karma with intellect involved. The latter is
 +
superior. So, He advises Arjuna to resort to this understanding while doing karma.
 +
While fighting in the battle, he should have the understanding that this is his
 +
karma and by doing so he would please Sri Krishna. By pleasing Him, Arjuna will
 +
get all happiness. We have to see sloka 50. In the 50th and 51st slokas Sri
 +
Krishna mentions two rewards. In sloka 50 He says all undesirables will be
 +
destroyed from us. In sloka 51 He says we will get our desires fulfilled. It is
 +
usual for anyone to wish that things he disliked were all destroyed and get only
 +
things he liked. But the things disliked and things liked vary from person to
 +
person. Universally there should be something, which is liked by all, and
 +
something else hated by all. All like devotion to Him and reaching His feet. All
 +
would dislike what does not please God. There should not be difference in this
 +
common like and dislike. We should avoid the rebirths and associated miseries in
 +
life. Without the fluctuation of happiness and sorrow, but only everlasting
 +
happiness at His feet is what we should aspire for.
 +
Here yoga is the buddhi or understanding that the karma is being done not for
 +
inferior objectives but only as a devotion to Him. So, Sri Krishna advises Arjuna
 +
to strive for this yoga. In any work we do our intellect should be involved. When
 +
a mother feeds her child, though milk is fed, her thought that she is its mother
 +
is always there. So this becomes a noble one. In contrast, the commercially
 +
available milk does not establish a relation between the child and the mother.
 +
This is an inferior act as mere feeding is done. An action by itself cannot
 +
elevate a person unless the intellect also is involved. Iha means while doing the
 +
karma. With proper understanding or buddhi that the karma is being done as a
 +
devotion to Him and not for any inferior rewards, when the person is doing the
 +
karma yoga here itself- he relinquishes both punya and papa. � Therefore Arjuna
 +
should strive to get that buddhi. Arjuna should fight, as it is his dharma. By
 +
doing that he should realize he will be pleasing the Lord. Pleasing Him will make
 +
this life happy and bring in the eternal happiness by reaching the feet of God.
 +
But a thought that this fight will enable him to experience blood smeared victory
 +
and kingdom, will bring rebirths and the associated miseries. Kausalam is talent.
 +
Sri Krishna says that both papa and punya are expended. How can doing karma
 +
nullify our papa and punya? How are these related? These doubts may arise. How our
 +
performing karma destroys the invisible papa and punya? This is one query.
 +
In Athimanushastavam, Kooratalwan says that in this world punya or papa is related
 +
to His feeling of happiness and unhappiness. It is all right papa is destroyed,
 +
but why should the punya also
 +
be got rid of? After all everybody is trying to acquire punya. Why then Sri
 +
Krishna says punya as well as papa will be removed? We should know what are punya
 +
and papa. We do certain karma and they may bring punya for us. Some other deeds
 +
may bring papa. These are not written anywhere as we do various deeds whether any
 +
are for punya or papa. But these are engraved in Him. They cannot be wiped out nor
 +
there will be any misappropriation of one�s papa and punya are accounted for
 +
someone else. If our deed pleases Him, they are punya. If our deeds are
 +
displeasing to Him, then they bring papa. This will raise the doubt why then we
 +
should remove the happiness in Him i.e. punya? We should remember that our goal is
 +
to reach His feet and get
 +
Moksham. For that goal, the ordinary delights in this world as well as the
 +
pleasure in swarga are all impediments. It is like a person arrested is in
 +
fetters. Whether that person will be happy if
 +
the fetters are golden instead of iron fetters? So, when Moksham is the objective,
 +
both papa and punya have to be avoided. By acquiring punya one goes to swarga and
 +
by papa actions one
 +
goes to naraka. In either case, one does not go to Moksham. Therefore one has to
 +
avoid the karmas yielding either punya or papa. If punya was just an entity we
 +
could avoid that, but when
 +
punya means God s happiness, should we � avoid that also?
 +
During Mohini Avataaram, Devas prayed Him for Amrut to have immortality. But they
 +
never prayed for His feet and permanent happiness in His Company. Had they
 +
requested Him, His
 +
happiness would have been the ultimate and total. Though He would be happy that we
 +
by doing punya karma we did not go to naraka, He would feel happiest if we seek
 +
His feet. By doing
 +
jyotishhomam he sought swarga and God will be definitely pleased to grant him. But
 +
there will be a small resentment that instead of praying for Him, the person has
 +
demanded only swarga.
 +
Though the person has followed the Vedas and performed His commands only, the
 +
person has ignored the Vedanta and not aspired for Moksham and to this extent God
 +
will have a small
 +
unhappiness. Therefore karmas, which will fetch punya, have to be avoided. From
 +
this we have to learn a minute lesson. If we pray Him to get Him, He is fully
 +
happy. But if we pray Him for
 +
anything else, Lord is not that happy.
 +
He, who is established in EVENNESS OF MIND in the performance of actions,
 +
relinquishes good and evil karmas which have accumulated from time immemorial
 +
causing bondage
 +
endlessly. Therefore, acquire this aforesaid evenness of mind (Buddhi Yoga).
 +
Yoga is skill in action. That is, this evenness of mind when one is engaged in
 +
action, is possible through
 +
great skill i.e ability.
 +
2.51
 +
karma-jam buddhi-yukta hi phalam tyaktva manisinah:
 +
janma-bandha-vinir-muktah padam gacchanty anaa-mayam
 +
Those who possess this evenness of mind while performing actions and relinquish
 +
their fruits, are freed from the bondage of rebirth and go to the region beyond
 +
all ills. "Hi" means that
 +
this dictum or teaching is well known in all the upanishads. How actions are able
 +
to turn out to be the means of liberation are being now given. Those with
 +
spiritual intelligence who relinquish all
 +
fruitive desires for the results of all actions, perform in righteousness
 +
activities as an offering unto the Supreme Lord are blessed with self-realisation,
 +
and being released from the bondage of birth and death they being liberated attain
 +
the eternal and everlasting spiritual worlds (SriVaikuntam) of the Supreme Lord
 +
Krishna.
 +
Amayam means illness and Anaa-mayam means the place or position without illness.
 +
That is placement in Vaikunta. The one who does the karma yoga with his buddhi or
 +
consciously,
 +
reaches the place free of illness i.e.anaa-mayam. Men discarding the karmas by
 +
which they will obtain inferior results, and by doing the karma with buddhi or
 +
intellect- that they will not do a
 +
karma for ordinary rewards but for the highest reward of Moksham, the karma is
 +
done as a devotion to God- will get the superior results. For this they are to be
 +
released from their shackles
 +
or bandham and obtain the never-to-return position (vinir-muktah). The birth and
 +
death are shackles and the karma yoga destroys these anishta or undesirables.
 +
Then, gets the ishtam or
 +
desirable of the highest reward of Moksham where one does not face any miseries.
 +
Padam can mean the feet of the Lord . "Vishnoh Padeh paramey madhva utsah:"
 +
or His abode, Sri Vaikuntam:
 +
" tad vishnoh paramam padam sada pashyanti surayo diviva chakshur-atatam , tad
 +
vipraso vipanyavo jagrivamsaha, samindhate vishnor yat paramam padam"
 +
(Just as the sun's rays in the sky are extended to the mundane vision, so in the
 +
same way the wise and learned devotees always see the supreme abode of Lord
 +
Vishnu. Because those highly
 +
praiseworthy and spiritually awake brahmanas are able to see the spiritual world,
 +
they are also able to reveal that supreme abode of Lord Vishnu." (Rig Veda
 +
1.22.20) )
 +
By combining both we can interpret that by clinging to His feet we can reach His
 +
abode, Vaikuntam or Moksham. By seeking refuge at His feet our fetters or bandham
 +
in this world are eliminated. For this we have to perform karma yoga without
 +
aspiring for inferior rewards and with conscience that it is done as a devotion to
 +
Him.
 +
Like the same type of food, however tasty it might be, produces aversion, by doing
 +
karmas for inferior rewards our birth gets repeated and produces distaste. Whereas
 +
in Moksham he appears
 +
afresh every moment and our experience also is fascinating every moment. Namo
 +
namo bavati jayamanaha so says Upanishad. He appears afresh � every time we look
 +
at Him. The Lord is
 +
decorated everyday differently and it fascinates us every time we look at Him.
 +
Ornaments, attires, garlands, vehicles and even the prasad are changed daily. He
 +
is purana or very ancient but
 +
at the same time He appears anew everytime and graces us. Such persons attain
 +
Moksham. The Lord of this place does this important duty of getting us the
 +
Moksham. We can see how an
 +
atman goes from a body to Moksham and how Thirumogur Apthan is helping the atman
 +
in getting that highest reward.
 +
In Chandogya and Brihadaranya Upanishads and in Alwars� hymns Archiradi marg is
 +
explained. Atman is residing in a very minute form in the heart. Let us assume
 +
that after innumerous births
 +
all papa and punya have been expended. After this the journey of the atman starts.
 +
All the shackles of papa and punya acquired not only in this life of 70 or 80
 +
years but of the innumerous birth
 +
cycles experienced by the atman and which have been there binding us to this
 +
world are to be cut off now. Just as His birth removed the shackles in His parents
 +
Vasudeva and Devaki, karma
 +
yoga with dedication to His feet cuts off these bondages. There is a small hole on
 +
the top of our head. When a child is born this spot can be felt but later as the
 +
child is daily bathed, skull
 +
covers this spot. This spot is called Brahma ranthram. From the heart to this
 +
Brahma ranthram there is a nerve called sushoomna nadi. Normally this passage is
 +
dark and one day the Lord
 +
illuminates the entire path for the atman to take the journey. Out of the 101
 +
nerves, the Lord identifies the sushoomna nadi as the route for the soul to take
 +
the journey. The soul with His
 +
help now pierces the Brahma ranthram and goes on archiradi marg. The Lord gives
 +
the atman a minute body to escape as the body made of the five elements is cast
 +
off in this world.
 +
Archit means jyoti or light. This brilliantly lit up route is there to the atman.
 +
Just as a person struggles when from darkness he is brought to bright light, the
 +
atman also is dazed. Now comes
 +
the Sri Kalamega Perumal. He is also called Sri Marga Bandhu or Vazhithunai
 +
Perumal. As a friend and guide Thirumogur Apthan will lead us on this grand
 +
voyage. Like the clouds,
 +
He sprinkles water, which is His compassion, on the entire route to make the Atman
 +
feel comfortable. Nammalwar wanted to reach the Holy Feet of the Lord and remain
 +
in service in
 +
Vaikuntam. We also can cling to the lotus feet of the Sri Kalamega Perumal praised
 +
by Alwar. Such is the splendor His idol and all should come here and experience
 +
the bliss.
 +
In this context, it's useful to note Varaha Charama Slokam, where the Lord states,
 +
When our body, mind, intellect and vital organs are properly functioning and in
 +
our control, if we surrender at the Divine feet of Sri Varaha Perumal, then, when
 +
we are in our death bed, when we can not even remember His name nor our body and
 +
mind are in our control, Sri Varaha assures that He would remember and with a
 +
helping hand would take us to Moksham.
 +
sthithE manasi susvasthE sarIrE sathi yO nara:
 +
dhAthusAmyE sthithE smarthA visvarUpam cha maamajam (1)
 +
tathastham mriyamANam thu kAshtA paashaNa sannibham
 +
aham smarAmi madh bhaktham nayAmi paramAm gathim (2)
 +
(Meaning ):Oh Bhumi Devi ! The entire universe is my body (sarIram ) . I do not
 +
have births or deaths . When my bhakthAs with mahA visvAsam surrender to me,
 +
while they are still in a
 +
state of tranquil mind and healthy body and reflect about Me as as SarvAdharan
 +
( root cause of all) , NiyanthA ( one who commands from within ) sarva sEshi
 +
( the ultimate ), aasrayaNeeyan
 +
( one who is fit to be worshipped ) , Sarva VyApthan (all-pervasive ) and Nithya
 +
sannihithan ( One who is always near ) , THEN I think of them at their last
 +
moments, when they are totally
 +
unconscious like a log or a stone and lead them by archirAdhi maargam to My parama
 +
padham and bless them to have nithya kaimkarya bhAgyam to Me there .
 +
The liberated living entities seek that place where there are no material
 +
miseries. The Bhagavatam says (Bhag. 10.14.58) :
 +
samasrita ye padapallava-plavam mahat-padam punya-yaso murareh
 +
bhavambudhir vatsa-padam param padam padam padam yad vipadam na tesam
 +
"For one who has accepted the boat of the lotus feet of the Lord, who is the
 +
shelter of the cosmic manifestation and is famous as Mukunda or the giver of
 +
mukti, the ocean of the material
 +
world is like the water contained in a calf's hoofprint. Param padam, or the place
 +
where there are no material miseries, or Vaikuntha, is his goal, not the place
 +
where there is danger in every
 +
step of life."
 +
Owing to ignorance, one does not know that this material world is a miserable
 +
place where there are dangers at every step. Out of ignorance only, less
 +
intelligent persons try to adjust to the
 +
situation by fruitive activities, thinking that the resultant actions will make
 +
them happy. They do not know that no kind of material body anywhere within the
 +
universe can give life without
 +
miseries. The miseries of life, namely birth, death, old age and diseases, are
 +
present everywhere within the material world. But one who understands his real
 +
constitutional position as the
 +
eternal servitor of the Lord, and thus knows the position of the Personality of
 +
Godhead, engages himself in the transcendental loving service of the Lord.
 +
Consequently he becomes qualified
 +
to enter into the Vaikuntha planets, where there is neither material, miserable
 +
life nor the influence of time and death. To know one's constitutional position
 +
means to know also the sublime
 +
position of the Lord. One who wrongly thinks that the living entity's position and
 +
the Lord's position are on the same level is to be understood to be in darkness
 +
and therefore unable to engage himself in the devotional service of the Lord. He
 +
becomes a lord himself and thus paves the way for the repetition of birth and
 +
death. But one who, understanding that his position is to serve, transfers himself
 +
to the service of the Lord, at once becomes eligible for Vaikunthaloka. Service
 +
for the cause of the Lord is called karma-yoga or buddhi-yoga, or in plain words,
 +
devotional service to the Lord.
 +
2.52
 +
yada te moha-kalilam buddhir vyati-tarisyati
 +
tada gantasi nirvedam srotavyasya srutasya ca
 +
52nd sloka is the last sloka on Karma yoga. Earlier by some slokas the everlasting
 +
nature of atman was told. From 39th sloka Karma yoga was described. In that
 +
sequence this is the
 +
last sloka.
 +
Lord says that Arjuna would regret and feel ashamed about the petty things he is
 +
attached and running around and ignoring the reality of what needs to be pursued,
 +
after hearing what Krishna
 +
has already said and will be saying in the next slokas. His i.e his buddhi
 +
(intelligence) will get out (vyati-tarisyati) of Moham (delusion) and Kalilam and
 +
at that time, he will reach (gantasi) nirvedam(sad, ashamed) after hearing what
 +
Krishna has said so far (srutasya) and will say (strotavyasya).
 +
Sri Krishna tells Arjuna that he is going to get disgusted with himself for having
 +
clung to various things and which, his mind should have concentrated, were ignored
 +
all these days. His intellect was confused all these days. Moham means confusion.
 +
When his buddhi comes out of this confusion, at that time he will get nirvedam
 +
i.e. he will start hating himself. When he is going to attain this state? After
 +
having heard all that Sri Krishna told and all that He is going to tell in due
 +
course. Sri Krishna had told him that he was attached to various things and in the
 +
coming slokas He is going to further explain on this subject. Hearing both, Arjuna
 +
is going to get nirvedam or get disgusted and blame himself. �Where I should have
 +
attachment, I did not and where I should not have attachment, I had�. This is
 +
going to be Arjuna�s lamentation. Our various actions were all targeted for
 +
inferior rewards. Did we aspire for such low objectives? Such aversion is going to
 +
overtake. We should have attachment to the Lord. Our atman should have been
 +
serving Him only. Discarding these noble things in life we have been after all
 +
inferior objectives. We desired all those which were impediments to Moksham and
 +
which were all temporary and transient. Mourning such actions of us is nirvedam.
 +
So far we have understood that karma performed with detachment and with our buddhi
 +
or conscience involved, our papa and punya are eradicated. With the elimination of
 +
papa and punya , rebirths are eliminated. By avoiding rebirth we reach God�s feet.
 +
Nammalwar says [2.x]: Pattrilan Isanum , Muttravam Ninrann, Patrilayaay, avan
 +
Mutril Adange! the Lord does not desire anything else but only us. When will we
 +
reach Him is His thought
 +
always. Therefore we should also discard our desires in other things and cling to
 +
His feet. Our query is that He is somewhere and after so much of time if we
 +
suddenly fall at His feet, will He
 +
accept? He is so great and will He not kick us out for not coming to Him all these
 +
days? In Srimad Ramayana, Vibheeshana was somewhere else. When he sought refuge in
 +
Sri Rama,
 +
he was not driven away. Whoever be, if he comes and falls at His feet, the Lord
 +
never drives him away.
 +
In this context, it's useful to note the slokam on Sudarshan Azhwar. The Discus
 +
held by the Lord in His right hand eliminates all our sins.
 +
Spurath sahasrara sikhathi theevram Sudarsanam bhaskara koti thulyam l
 +
surad visam prana vinasi Vishno: chakram sadaham saranam prabadye ll
 +
From all these we understand that the Lord is desirous of taking us to His domain.
 +
We should also have identical desire but we concentrated on inferior rewards.
 +
Pondering over this only will induce nirvedam and Arjuna will start disliking his
 +
behavior all these days. Our buddhi is contaminated. As long as papa and punya are
 +
there our buddhi will be like this only. Just as we cannot see our image clearly
 +
if the mirror has dust on it, with polluted mind we cannot perform any yoga
 +
properly; we cannot distinguish truth from falsehood. Which is thyajyam
 +
[rejectable] and which is upadheyam [acceptable] will not be known. This is what
 +
He calls mohakalinam. This is a great question before all of us. We cannot decide
 +
what we want. If all are asked to demand only one, which cannot be changed later,
 +
there will be total silence. We can never be firm in what we want and the
 +
requirement changes every moment. Do we want education or employment or good
 +
family orwealth? We can never be decisive. This is one type. But what Arjuna is
 +
told is that he should discard all the small and ordinary benefits like victory,
 +
swarga, etc, and desire only the feet of Sri Krishna. Thus the supreme goal will
 +
be unique or singular while the inferior rewards will be many and in multitude. We
 +
should reject the multitudes and accept the unique. This is rational knowledge.
 +
That is we are able to distinguish our acceptable and rejectable. In Sanskrit this
 +
is called thyajya upadeya gyan or viveka gyan. Once this moha kalinam is jumped
 +
over, nirvedam steps in and we start blaming ourselves for desiring such trivial
 +
things in life and having wasted our time. This disgust is a necessary step to
 +
reach Him. This only will make one to perform karma yoga with buddhi. Therefore
 +
from this 52nd sloka we understood all those multiple desires we should discard
 +
and contemplate on the unique desire to reach His feet by detached karma yoga.
 +
After this Sri Krishna starts His sermon on Gyana Yoga with introduction.
 +
<nowiki>************</nowiki>
 +
Summary of slokas covered in Second Chapter so far:
 +
Sri Krishna, in Gita tells about Moksham in two parts and in two situations.
 +
Our Ultimate goal is to reach the feet of Paramatman. But suddenly we cannot jump
 +
to that height. Therefore it is
 +
necessary to understand our atman. With this knowledge we should practice Karma
 +
yoga uninterruptedly. What is the knowledge about atman? This was detailed from
 +
12th sloka to 37th sloka
 +
in 2nd Chapter. Thereafter, He started telling about Karma yoga. In the 38th sloka
 +
He explained how a karma yogi would perceive equitably victory/defeat, profit/loss
 +
and happiness/sorrow
 +
i.e "Sukha Dukha, Samey krtva, Labah-Alabau Jaya-Ajayau". With this as
 +
introduction, from 39th sloka He explained Karma yoga (Esha teh Bhitah Sankey..).
 +
So we see two steps.
 +
First is to realize Paramatman. Before that we have to realize our atman. This is
 +
called atma sakshatkaram. That is possessing clear understanding of Atma. Nothing
 +
more is required to clarify atman- this clarity should be possessed. This will be
 +
like seeing atman and so is called atma sakshatkaram. To reach this state what is
 +
needed? Three things are needed. One, the ordinary knowledge about atman. This
 +
only will mature to get atma sakshatkaram. This is a basic knowledge about atman.
 +
Once this knowledge is acquired, then we do karma without attachment or with
 +
detachment. This Karma yoga should be continuously performed. This will enable to
 +
eliminate the contaminations in our mind or intellect. Why this contamination was
 +
there?
 +
As long as papa and punya are there this pollution will be there. Confusion is the
 +
contamination. What is the confusion? Which is to be discarded and which is to be
 +
adhered to? This lack of
 +
knowledge to differentiate, is the confusion. As long as this knowledge is not
 +
acquired, the knowledge about atman is not going to ripen. Because we have to
 +
adhere to atman and leave all
 +
others. Thus the mind or buddhi is contaminated. Without the ripening or maturing
 +
of knowledge we cannot get atma sakshatkaram. To get this we have to meditate on
 +
the atman
 +
uninterruptedly. To meditate continuously we require serene mind.
 +
Like an automobile requires clear petrol and clean carburetor for smooth running,
 +
a serene mind is needed. Rational knowledge of on what we should have attachment
 +
and on which we should
 +
be detached should be there. In a confused mind meditation is impossible. Without
 +
meditation, we cannot get atma sakshatkaram. We can visualize this as stairway.
 +
By performing Karma yoga we can eradicate papa and punya. Eliminating papa and
 +
punya will facilitate to clear the confusion in our minds as to which are to be
 +
adhered to and which are to
 +
be discarded, and the mind is serene. Serene mind will allow proper meditation on
 +
atman. This will lead to atma sakshatkaram. With clear and full understanding of
 +
atman, the inner motive
 +
force of atman Paramatman- will be realized. This requires Bhakti � yoga. This will
 +
be explained in the 7th, 8th and 9th Chapters. That will be the ultimate and final
 +
step.
 +
So reaching Paramatman by Bhakti yoga is one part. Since we do not have the
 +
ability to go direct to Paramatman, we have to acquire knowledge about Jeevatman.
 +
This Jeevatma
 +
sakshatkaram is another part. To get this we require doing continuous meditation,
 +
which is called Gyana yoga. This requires unpolluted intellect and so we have to
 +
get rid of papa and punya.
 +
This needs performing Karma yoga. For this basic knowledge about atman is
 +
necessary. That is why Sri Krishna sermonized on the basic nature of atman from
 +
12th to 37th sloka of Chapter II.
 +
We can recall that He told that atman is everlasting, it is different from body,
 +
it is an embodiment of gyana or knowledge, it is full of bliss, it cannot be
 +
destroyed, it is indivisible, it can not be
 +
moistened or dried and it cannot be cut or burnt. This basic knowledge was tutored
 +
and made us to realize that atman is superior to body and it cannot be destroyed
 +
and so we should find
 +
ways and means to uplift atman. What should be our efforts for this? After
 +
learning the attitude of a Karma yogi, we have now learnt from 39th till 52nd
 +
sloka detailingKarma yoga.
 +
The one, who does Karma yoga with buddhi, destroys papa and punya and gets the
 +
bliss of Moksham. (Ihey Sukrutah duskrute. Iha Gahati ; Tadah Gacchanti AnAmayam).
 +
Karma yoga was deliberated. Karma yoga removes papa/punya. Removal of papa/punya
 +
gets us nirmala or unalloyed, serene mind.
 +
Looking back we can appreciate the logical manner all the slokas are placed. Like
 +
an able Professor teaches, Sri Krishna is taking us step by step to understand our
 +
lifestyle. Till 38th
 +
sloka , he detailed about Atma's nityatvam and Atma Gnaanam. And Till 52nd sloka
 +
Karma Yoga was explained.
 +
Karma yoga removes papa/punya. Removal of papa/punya gets us nirmala or unalloyed,
 +
serene mind. The next 53rd sloka will tell us what we achieve by a serene mind. In
 +
such a mind a
 +
coherent and concentrated knowledge can be unshakably established. This knowledge
 +
is about atman.
 +
Why this knowledge is steadfast? Because, it cannot be shaken by any rewards like
 +
that pleasure or this comfort. Our objective is only atma sakshatkaram. We have
 +
already seen that in sloka
 +
2.41, the buddhi in pursuit of atman will be unique or singular, while the buddhi
 +
striving for other rewards will be in multiples. Rewards are many, buddhi also are
 +
many and efforts also are
 +
many. In the case of atman as objective, only one effort, objective is one and
 +
buddhi also is one. This singular knowledge will be acquired. This knowledge will
 +
be resolute and unshakable.
 +
It is in a serene and clear mind. Just as a dust-free mirror reflects our face
 +
brilliantly, we can see our atman in a serene, free of papa and punya, mind. This
 +
constant meditation is Gyana yoga.
 +
Without papa/punya there is nothing to distract and drag the mind from meditation,
 +
just as a firm ground will not slip below. Continuous Gyana yoga will result in
 +
atma sakshatkaram.
 +
Let us recapitulate the steps.
 +
Basic, ordinary knowledge about atman. (i.e Atma is eternal, � body is temporary
 +
etc)
 +
� Performing Karma yoga with detachment
 +
� Elimination of papa/punya and acquisition of unconfused mind (after performing
 +
Karma Yogam)
 +
� Qualified to undertake Gyana yoga. (after acquiring steady mind )
 +
� Ripening of Gyana yoga will lead to Atma sakshatkaram.
 +
There can be a doubt here. The first step is knowledge of atman and again the last
 +
step also is understanding atman. What is the difference? The first step was very
 +
elementary knowledge that
 +
atman is different from body and it is eternal. But visualizing the entire atman
 +
with its eminence is the last step. Thus this is a refinement process to get atma
 +
sakshatkaram. The knowledge at
 +
that time will enable one to realize that all atman are same and Paramatman
 +
resides in all atman. This knowledge is not acquired in the beginning or first
 +
step.
 +
<nowiki>*****</nowiki>
 +
 +
2.53
 +
shruti-vi-pratipanna te yada sthasyati niscala
 +
samadhav acala buddhis tada yogam avapsyasi
 +
"When your mind has absorbed so far [Sri Krishna s sermon], � and enlightened the
 +
intellect or buddhi , and when it remains resolute and unshaken by others, then
 +
you will have attained the atma sakshatkaram�
 +
The word yogam here indicates atma sakshatkaram. So objective of second Chapter is
 +
atma sakshatkaram. Arjuna was listening to the sermons of Sri Krishna (shruti vi
 +
pratipanna te)
 +
and this enlightened his intellect or buddhi and enabled him to know what is to be
 +
adhered to and what are to be discarded in life, resulting in removing the
 +
contamination of papa/punya in the mind (acala Buddhi) . This knowledge is going
 +
to blossom as Gyana yoga, which will remain steady(samadhau). This will mature in
 +
due course to have atma sakshatkaram.
 +
Sri Krishna tells Arjuna that he will get atma sakshatkaram. That is matured
 +
understanding of atman. There is no difference in the atman in various bodies.
 +
Same Paramatman resides in all atman. When this state is achieved the person is
 +
detached and renounces all worldly desires. Such a person is the one who has a
 +
ripened Gyana yoga. He gets atma sakshatkaram. When we talk about this we feel
 +
weary and wonder whether we can reach that state. But Sri Krishna does not preach
 +
something, which we cannot practice. Why then we feel bewildered? Because such
 +
things have not been in our daily habits and customs. We have never cultivated a
 +
habit to look at our atman or to control our organs. We do not control and choose
 +
right food for the body and mind. Because we are not habituated, initially we find
 +
some obstacles. But slowly practicing these, they will become our habits. We will
 +
then know how sweet life is, if we practice what Sri Krishna told. Atma
 +
sakshatkaram is all souls are identical, happiness or sorrow does not affect and
 +
realizing Paramatman is residing in every atman.
 +
Karma yoga is practicing our daily routines like eating, sleeping, nithya
 +
anushtanam, cultivating lands, doing business, guarding our home land, etc. We are
 +
doing these already but with an attachment. Same actions we should do as devotion
 +
to God and to please God. This is a first step and difficult to do. We can list
 +
all our activities and review which are all pleasing to God and decide to do only
 +
those and discard those which will displease Him. After that, we should slowly
 +
remove our attachments to the activities, which are pleasing to God. We should
 +
also realize that the activities are not done by us but by Him. We have already
 +
seen that we cannot claim any activity as done by us, as five entities are
 +
involved- self, Paramatma, body, organs and the prana. So it is always a team
 +
work. If we do our routine work with a resolution that we will not do them for
 +
ordinary rewards and with total detachment, it is Karma yoga. Continuous practice
 +
of Karma yoga, reduces the impact of papa/punya. Because of papa only we suffer so
 +
many things in life like sickness, poverty, children�s problems and so many. So we
 +
have to get the impact of papa reduced. We are normally interested in rewards but
 +
we do not ponder over the ways to achieve. That is why Sri Krishna advises Arjuna
 +
to do his assigned duties with detachment and this will, as Karma yoga, yield
 +
results. He will get atma sakshatkaram. The lecturer should not lecture for fame
 +
or compensation but with a higher objective that Gita will be learnt by many and
 +
that would please God. Similarly the listeners should not listen to boast that
 +
they know Gita, but as an eye opener for practicing Karma yoga and pleasing God,
 +
thereby. This common objective of pleasing God for all of us in all works will
 +
make us practice Karma yoga. But if our objectives are all different we will be
 +
reborn. Karma yoga will reduce papa/punya and mind will get purified. All these we
 +
were doing with very little application of our intellect- that we are not doing
 +
these and not aspiring for ordinary rewards. We are yet to do meditation by
 +
controlling our organs. We have been doing our regular activities only. By
 +
continuous practice our minds get purified and we are then ready for meditation.
 +
We will have continuous thoughts on atman and our organs will get controlled.
 +
Happiness and sorrow would not affect us and we will see all as equal. This is
 +
Gyana yoga. Without interruption we will meditate on the atman. Even a half an
 +
hour such meditation will give us great benefits. But knowing the difficulty to
 +
practice Gyan yoga, Sri Krishna advises Arjuna in 3rd Chapter that he need not do
 +
Gyana yoga but by Karma yoga alone he can get atma sakshatkaram. But now Sri
 +
Krishna tells about Gyana yoga to laud its superiority. When He says that we need
 +
not practice very difficult Gyana yoga to reach Him, but continue our normal
 +
routines as Karma yoga, we have to understand His concern for us.
 +
2.54
 +
arjuna uvaca
 +
sthita-prajnasya kaa bhaasha samadhi-sthasya keshava
 +
sthita-dhih kim prabhaseta kim aasita vrajeta kim
 +
In the 53rd sloka Sri Krishna tells how one is ready to practice Gyana yoga and
 +
get atma sakshatkaram. Arjuna is too eager to know more about such a person
 +
practicing Gyana yoga. What
 +
all he will do, what he will think- such questions rise before Arjuna and so he
 +
asks this in the 54th sloka:
 +
"Arjuna said: O Krishna, what are the symptoms of one whose consciousness is firm
 +
in meditation? Such a steady minded person what does he speak, and what words will
 +
describe him? What does he think, and how does he act?"
 +
sthithapragna he who has resolute or firm conviction. Sri � Krishna is going to
 +
reply this in the next four slokas.
 +
After telling that atman is eternal and continuous practice of Karma yoga will
 +
purify our mind, Gyana yoga can be practiced in the crystal clear mind. Arjuna
 +
became eager and wanted to know
 +
the traits of a Gyana yogi. How would he speak? How would he think? What are his
 +
actions? This was in 54th sloka. Sthitaprgna means Gyana yogi. Pragna means our
 +
intellect. Sthita is
 +
steady. When our intellect or buddhi is steady and firm, it is the first step in
 +
Gyana yoga. Sri Krishna in reply to Arjuna�s query, lauds sthitapragna from 55th
 +
sloka. That is Sri Krishna praises
 +
the Gyana yogi who has acquired atma gyana. Swami Nammalwar is head among such
 +
gyanis. He is named prapanna jana kootasthar. Lord Sri Ranganatha affectionately
 +
called him
 +
Nam [Our] Alwar, even though there were ten Alwars.
 +
Sri Krishna had to explain Gyana yogi in four slokas. This Gyana yoga is in four
 +
types or samgya. These are Yatamana samgya, Vyatireka samgya, Yetendria samgya and
 +
Vaseekara samgya.
 +
What we require is vairagyam or dispassion or steadfastness. We have to get
 +
detached from the worldly affairs. This only will qualify us to Gyana yoga. So we
 +
have to slowly climb step by
 +
step. The highest or the last step is explained in the 55th sloka. The third step
 +
is in 56th sloka and the second step is in 57th sloka. The initial step is 58th
 +
sloka. So we have to first see 58th
 +
sloka, as that is the first step. So there will be a reversal in the sloka order
 +
and after coming to 55th sloka we will go to 59th sloka.
 +
Let us see what these samgyas are. Normally our desires are varied. Let us assume
 +
one has the drinking habit. This is an undesirable habit and has to be discarded.
 +
Initially when he sees drinks he should turn away and control his passion. This is
 +
the first step or Yatamana samgya, where we avoid any contact with such bad
 +
things. This will not make us abandon our passion
 +
in such things. Second step will be to remove such desires or vyatireka samgya.
 +
The third step Yetendriya samgya, where we control our mind. Even after
 +
controlling all the organs, mind will
 +
be difficult to control. It is like oil in a cup. If we throw out the oil, there
 +
will still be the greasy layer sticking to the cup surface. The last step is
 +
Vaseekara samgya. It is like rubbing the cup with powder to remove the greasy
 +
layer.
 +
So the steps are
 +
1.Trying to control our sensual organs from objects.
 +
2. Removing the desire from the organs.
 +
3. Removing the small traces in the mind.
 +
4. Total removal of such desires without any trace.
 +
2.58 (note, we will be covering 58, 57, 56, 55 in reverse order)
 +
yada samharate ca-ayam kurmo �ngan-Iva sarvasah:
 +
indriyani-indriya-arthebhya: tasya prajna pratisthita
 +
One who is able to withdraw his senses from sense objects, as the tortoise draws
 +
its limbs within the shell, is to be understood as truly situated in knowledge.
 +
This is the first sloka explaning about the nature of a Gnaani. Control Senses!
 +
This is the first step or Yatamaana samgya
 +
Ayam - The Gnaani , Yada- When Samaharate - Controls , Indriyani - Senses
 +
, Indriyaa-Arthebhya - Sense Objects (objects of smell, taste, touch etc)
 +
Koormah - Tortoise, Anganiva - Parts of its body(head, limbs etc)
 +
Lord Krishna gives the analogy of a turtle which withdraws its limbs inside.
 +
Similarly when one is able to keep their senses from pursuing sensual objects of
 +
mundane pleasure by withdrawing
 +
the senses inside and who also consciously reflects upon the soul within, such a
 +
one is sthita-prajna situated in the perfect knowledge of transcendent meditation.
 +
Now, we will get a doubt immediately. How is it possible to do this? Do we have
 +
to close our eyes, not hear anything, keep away from everything etc.. This is not
 +
the case.
 +
Lord's implication in this sloka is that we have to reign in our senses and not
 +
let it stray. For e.g. In our eating habits, we have to discriminate on eating
 +
what is allowed and what is
 +
prohibited.
 +
Nammazhwar was the epitome of a true Gnaani, which Lord is explaning to Arjuna in
 +
this and the next three Slokas. A Gnaani Yogi controls his senses and focuses on
 +
his true self
 +
which is servitude to Paramatma. Nammazhwar meditated for 16 years without food,
 +
water etc, right from his birth. In response to a question by MaduraKavi Azhwar,
 +
If Jeevatma(Soul)
 +
which resides in Achit(This body) , attains Jnaana (realizes its true nature,
 +
which is true nature to Paramatma), where does it reside and what does it do?
 +
Nammazhwar's response was that , the jeevatma who realized his true nature, will
 +
constantly meditate on Paramatma and consider kaimkaryam to lord and his devotees
 +
as it's primary duty.
 +
Nammazhwar's glory is captured in this tanian:
 +
Vakula Bharanam Vandey Jagatah Bharanam Munim
 +
Ya Srutey Uttaram Bhagam Chakrey Dravida Bhashaya:
 +
(Meaning:Nammazhwar adorned Vakula Mala ; He is adorned as the jewel by this
 +
earth; He took birth in this world to expound the tattvam of upanishad in Tamil.)
 +
2.57
 +
yah sarvatraa-anabhi-sneha: tat tat praapya subha-asubham
 +
naa-abhinandati na-dvesti tasya prajna pratisthita
 +
Forming no attachments in any situation means to be indifferent, unconcerned in an
 +
aloof state or attitude. Auspicious is a situation that is pleasing and
 +
inauspicious is a situation that is displeasing. Lord Krishna is instructing not
 +
to be overjoyed by the pleasing nor despondent over the unpleasant. One who can
 +
successfully engage themselves thus is sthita-prajna situated in the perfect
 +
knowledge of transcendental consciousness.
 +
This is Vyatireka samgya, to divert our sensual organs from inferior objects to
 +
superior ones. The earlier&first step was to avoid or prevent our organs in touch
 +
with sensual objects.
 +
These words tasya pranja pratishthita will be repeated in many places. Pranjya is
 +
knowledge and pratishthita is established. This Gyana yogi�s knowledge is
 +
established. He is also a Gyana
 +
yogi.
 +
Sneha meas desire. Abhisneha is excessive desire and anabhisneha is without excess
 +
desire. Such a person who is void of excess desire on all desirable objects, is
 +
neither happy for
 +
desirable objects nor unhappy on undesirable objects, he comes across. He does not
 +
get dejected nor curse for having got undesirable things. Similarly he is not
 +
happy if he gets desirable
 +
things. How is this possible? If there is a desirable thing in this world one
 +
should feel happy if one got it. After all we are made of senses and not inanimate
 +
or inert beings. If a child gets 98%
 +
his father should feel elated is natural. Similarly if the student scores 35%
 +
only, dejection is inevitable. Then why Sri Krishna is telling that both these
 +
expressions are to be avoided?
 +
In this world joy and sorrow are mixed. None can expect to have always victory.
 +
But we speak that in sports and games victory and defeat are common. On similar
 +
lines Sri Krishna tells
 +
us to know that joy and sorrow are common in life and we should be able to meet
 +
those equitably. One need not jump and hit the ceiling when happiness is there and
 +
at the same time
 +
need not get dejected and curse when sorrow things are encountered. Whereas a
 +
mature person has a different object as desirable and he is not worried about the
 +
common desirable
 +
things in life. For him God is desirable; soul is desirable. He is unattached to
 +
everything without a mental inclination towards anything totally indifferent to
 +
all sense objects. When exposed to sources of pleasure like mouth watering
 +
vegetable preperations, delicious nectarian fruit drinks, silky, fashionable
 +
clothes or luxurious homes such a one does not rejoice at receiving these things
 +
nor give praise to those who have bequeathed these things. Similarly when exposed
 +
to sources of unpleasantness like unpalatable food and drink, coarse unfashionable
 +
clothes and humble homes such a one does not show disdain and is indifferent to
 +
statements made by people to criticise him such as being called a pseudo yogi or a
 +
hypocrite. Thus the essence is such a one uses his words sparsely, praises no one
 +
and blames no one and because he possesses neither love nor hatred for any living
 +
being benefits all.
 +
Alwar imagines himself as a child and in front of him there are toys, ball and a
 +
parrot to play with. But he is devoted to Him. He names each of the playthings as
 +
Madhave, Kesava and Sridhara.
 +
Alwar is not interested in these toys are playful objects. At the same time like
 +
any ordinary child will get pleasure in play, Alwar gets in calling all these
 +
articles by their names he had christened,
 +
like Madhava, Kesava and Sridhara. While the sports articles may break or deform,
 +
but the names with which Alwar calls them will remain everlasting and so will give
 +
always happiness.
 +
Therefore, by diverting our thoughts on Him and get happiness in those thoughts,
 +
the worldly desirable and undesirable objects can never have any impact on us.
 +
Thus we divert our organs
 +
on God. These two steps thus train us to control our organs, which is an important
 +
step to control mind.
 +
This will be explained later.
 +
2.56
 +
duhkhesv anu-dvigna-manah: sukhesu vigata-sprhah
 +
vita-raga-bhaya-krodhah sthita-dhir munir ucyate
 +
This is "Ekeindriya Samgya"
 +
"One who is not disturbed in mind even amidst the threefold miseries or elated
 +
when there is happiness, and who is free from expectation, fear and anger, is
 +
called a sage of steady mind."
 +
We are seeing the various stages of Gyana yogi. The first step was the efforts.
 +
That Yatamana samgya was described like a tortoise withdrawing its feet and head
 +
into the shell from enemy attack, here the person withdraws the organs from
 +
contact with inferior desires. Next was Vyatireka samgya. Here the person assumes
 +
an impartial role of not joyful when desirable things occur nor brooding when sad
 +
things occur and observe detached mindset. Why does Sri Krishna ask Arjuna to be
 +
neutral and neither feel happy nor sorrow? It is seen practically that by having a
 +
neutral mind the work is done more efficient. By being emotionally attached to a
 +
work, it gets ruined. A surgeon takes an impartial view of the patient. In such
 +
situations emotion could spoil the work.
 +
This samgya is called EkeIndriya Samgya -> Ekam is One; INdriya is Senses; It is
 +
so called because controlling senses along is not enough, it's important to
 +
control Mind also which
 +
tries to provoke senses again. One who controls Mind which keeps senses in
 +
reign. This is Ekendriya samgya.
 +
Dhi is buddhi or intellect. Sthita dhi is well established knowledge. Person with
 +
such knowledge is praised by Sri Krishna as muni [munir ucyate].
 +
Muni -> Manana Seelah Munih: One who is capable of controlling mind (which
 +
includes controlling senses) and directing the buddhi to concentrate on Atma is
 +
called Muni. Person capable of controlling mind and directing it at the atman is
 +
called muni. Just by sitting in forest in a particular posture does not make one a
 +
muni. Controlling and directing mind as one wants is muni. All other organs can
 +
even be controlled but it is too difficult to control mind. That is why this is
 +
called Yekendriya samgya. Yekendriya means the single organ i.e. mind as the
 +
leader of all organs.
 +
How to control mind? Sri Krishna tells the way:
 +
<nowiki>*</nowiki>duhkhesv anu-dvigna-manah: We should be having unperturbed mind at the CAUSE of
 +
sorrow (not just sorrow).
 +
(ud-dvigna-manah-> Pertrubed mind; anu-dvigna-manah -> Unperturbed mind)
 +
<nowiki>*</nowiki>sukhesu vigata-sprhah: Similarly we should have unexcited mind at the CAUSE of
 +
joy (not just joy).
 +
(Sprhaha: Intrested or excited ; vigata-sprhah: without being excited or
 +
intrested)
 +
Note: So, remember, to be ANU-DVIGNA-MANAH! for sorrows/cause of them
 +
and to be VIGATA-SPRAHA: for joys/cause of them, which is reverse of normal!
 +
In addition to the above two, Krishna says we should avoid raaga, bhaya and
 +
krodha. (vita-raga-bhaya-krodhah!)
 +
Swami Ramanuja in his Gita Bhashyam has explained these three (raaga, Bhaya,
 +
Krodha) very well:
 +
<nowiki>*</nowiki>Raaga is the expectation feeling one has about a joyous thing to happen in the
 +
future. If a father is elated at the prospect of his son going to score very high
 +
marks in the results that
 +
are going to be published next day, it is raaga. That is our interest in a joy
 +
that is going to happen. Sri Krishna says that one should abandon this raga that
 +
is the feeling of an expectation.
 +
Not merely happiness or the cause for such happiness but even the anticipation
 +
or prospect of that event have to be avoided.
 +
<nowiki>*</nowiki>Bhayam -fear. It is the feeling one gets when there is a prospect of a happy
 +
thing not happening or an unhappy thing is happening. When we feel happy of a
 +
joyous event in future we get
 +
raga. But if that event is not likely to happen? Then the mind gets perturbed
 +
and that is bhaya. Bhaya is not the undesirable thing coming to us or the
 +
desirable one leaving us. Today what we
 +
feel about the prospect of an unwelcome guest tomorrow is bhaya. This bhaya
 +
will transform into sorrow when actually the unwanted guest knocks at our door and
 +
we see him. So bhaya
 +
becomes the cause for sorrow and Sri Krishna advises that bhaya also should be
 +
avoided. In the next day results whether his son is going to score low marks, is
 +
fear today for the father.
 +
When the results confirm that low marks the bhaya becomes sorrow. But on the
 +
contrary if the results reveal very high marks, bhaya is converted to happiness.
 +
<nowiki>*</nowiki>Krodha is anger. If one has raga and is expecting a happy event in future, and
 +
if some persons or things obstruct that event from happening then the feeling of
 +
krodha or anger is on those
 +
obstructing. So, raga transforms to happiness. Feeling of anger on the persons
 +
obstructing one from attaining that happiness, is krodha.
 +
Passion is the extreme mental attachment to objects cherished with intense
 +
desire with the intention of never letting possession of these objects be
 +
discontinued. Fear is the pain caused
 +
from the approaching agony arising from separation from what is cherished.
 +
Anger is a specific mental attitude which appears in one who experiences
 +
separation at the time of loss of
 +
cherished objects. These three passion, fear and anger all arise due to the
 +
lack of discrimination regarding the eternal nature of the soul. By the gradual
 +
development of this discrimination
 +
one becomes free from these three impediments and by this discrimination when
 +
the introspective one's contemplation becomes mature they're known as sthitaprajna.
 +
So Arjuna is advised to abandon(Vita) these three raga, bhaya and krodha and a
 +
person who achieves this is muni. To achieve this, MIND HAS TO BE CONTROLLED.
 +
What if raga or bhaya is there? Let us see the example of student. When were
 +
his marks decided? Was it when he wrote the exam? Or, when the evaluator saw his
 +
answer papers? Or,
 +
when the results were published? But actually his result was decided when he
 +
put in his efforts preparing for the exams. His efforts only will reflect in the
 +
exam. What he writes only will be
 +
evaluated. And, what the evaluation is there will be published. But our
 +
expectation is on the publishing only. So a person who understands this and avoids
 +
these three qualities is praised as
 +
muni.
 +
There are three types of sorrow or pain: adyatmika or physical, adhidaivika or
 +
supernatural and adhibhautika or natural. Adyatmika is pain of the body and pain
 +
of the mind. The pain of the
 +
body is diseases and ailments attacking it such as fever, rheumatism, gout,
 +
etc. The pain of the mind is due to insult, jealousy, shame and the like.
 +
Adhidaivika is pain caused by drought,
 +
flooding, cyclones, earthquakes, hurricanes, etc. Adhibhautika is pain caused
 +
from people, demons, animals, ghosts, etc. All these three are destined by fate
 +
and as such are not transitory
 +
and after experiencing them they fade into oblivion.
 +
The sthita-dhi-muni is always in Krsna consciousness, for he has exhausted all
 +
his business of creative speculation. He has surpassed the stage of mental
 +
speculations and has come to
 +
the conclusion that Lord Sri Krsna, or Vasudeva, is everything. He is called a
 +
muni fixed in mind. Such a fully Krsna conscious person is not at all disturbed by
 +
the onslaughts of the threefold
 +
miseries, for he accepts all miseries as the mercy of the Lord, thinking
 +
himself only worthy of more trouble due to his past misdeeds; and he sees that his
 +
miseries, by the grace of the Lord,
 +
are minimized to the lowest. Similarly, when he is happy he gives credit to
 +
the Lord, thinking himself unworthy of the happiness; he realizes that it is due
 +
only to the Lord's grace that he is in
 +
such a comfortable condition and able to render better service to the Lord.
 +
And, for the service of the Lord, he is always daring and active and is not
 +
influenced by attachment or aversion.
 +
Attachment means accepting things for one's own sense gratification, and
 +
detachment is the absence of such sensual attachment. But one fixed in Krsna
 +
consciousness has neither
 +
attachment nor detachment because his life is dedicated in the service of the
 +
Lord. Consequently he is not at all angry even when his attempts are unsuccessful.
 +
A Krsna conscious person is always steady in his determination.
 +
2.55
 +
praja-haati yada kaaman sarvaan partha mano-gataan
 +
atmany eva-atmana tustah: sthita-prajnas tadocyate
 +
" O Partha, when a man gives up all varieties of desire for sense gratification,
 +
which arise from mental concoction, and when his mind, thus purified, finds
 +
satisfaction in the self alone, then he is said to be in pure transcendental
 +
consciousness."
 +
When a person is satisfied in himself with himself, i.e. when his mind depends on
 +
the self within himself; and being content with that, expels all the desires of
 +
the mind which are different from that state of mind --- then he is said to be a
 +
man of firm wisdom. This is the highest form of devotion of knowledge. Then, the
 +
lower state, not far below it, of one established in firm wisdom, is described in
 +
later slokas (56,57,58), which we had already studied.
 +
Now we will see the fourth step of Vaseekara samgya in the 55th sloka. The first
 +
step Yatamana samgya in 58th sloka was our efforts to withdraw from objects
 +
creating inferior desires. The second step Vyatireka samgya in 57th sloka
 +
explained diversion of our organs from those objects and remain detached. The
 +
third step was Yekendriya samgya in 56th sloka where we were told to train our
 +
mind also detached from pleasures and sorrow. Now we will see the fourth step of
 +
Vaseekara samgya in the 55th sloka. Here we will be told that we have to get rid
 +
of all traces of all attachments and hatred, and ensure a sparkling pure mind.
 +
In this Sloka, Krishna says a gyaani is praised as Stitha Prajna, when? (Stita
 +
Prajna Tado ucyateh). When?
 +
Yada (when), Sarvaan Kaaman (all desires) manoh-gataan (from the mind)
 +
prajahaati(removed or expelled) and Atmany eva atmana tustah (i.e atma is the
 +
only objective of the mind
 +
and is content). When all desires in mind are expelled and atman is made the
 +
objective of the mind and remains happy. That is when mind is no longer becomes
 +
happy or otherwise with ordinary pleasures and sorrow but becomes happy with atman
 +
only. This is a very difficult stage to attain.
 +
Normally the mind is happy with pleasures enjoyed through the organs. We listen to
 +
a good music or we see a beautiful figure and become happy. But atman is formless
 +
and does not make
 +
sound nor can be tasted nor smelt. Then how can one get happiness? We all know
 +
that all images or sounds or tastes or scent will fade away one day. But atman is
 +
eternal. It is a quintessence of gyana and ananda or happiness. So this has to be
 +
inculcated in our mind. Normally we take vegetables for nourishment; but when we
 +
are sick, same nourishment is
 +
given to the body by drips. So it is possible to experience all our happiness felt
 +
in life, by engaging the mind on atman. This happiness will be everlasting unlike
 +
the worldly pleasures.
 +
This can be understood from the story of Prahlada. He was tortured in many ways:
 +
by making serpents to bite, by making elephants to tramp over him, by throwing
 +
him tied to a stone in
 +
mid ocean, by surrounding him with fire, etc. All these were never even felt by
 +
Prahada. Because he had engaged his mind fully in Sri Krishna. By this he was
 +
detached from the worldly
 +
miseries and pleasures. This is Vaseekara samgya. All including the mind is under
 +
control. There will be no trace of any worldly miseries and pleasures. To achieve
 +
this level the gyana yogi had to understand atman is superior, practice Karma
 +
yoga and remove all blemish in the mind and start Gyana yoga and reach the
 +
ultimate stage in Gyana yoga.
 +
We can see Alwar also as an example. In the mannai irundu thuzhavi Thiruvaimozhi
 +
ten pasurams, he shows that happiness and sorrow are mixed in this world. We have
 +
to withdraw our mind from all these and understand atman, then understand the
 +
inner atman of our atman as Paramatman. Our mind should be trained to
 +
concentrate only on Him. He squeezes the mud below and says this mud belongs to
 +
Sri Vamana [an incarnation of Sri Narayana]. Though there was considerable time
 +
span between the Sri Vamana incarnation and Alwar s time, � he sees God in all.
 +
While ordinary person will think of how to purchase the land where this mud was
 +
scooped out or what plant could be cultivated to earn money, Alwar thinks
 +
entirely different. When he sees burning fire he runs to embrace it as he sees the
 +
glowing figure of God. Because of this mentality the fire does not burn him. So we
 +
have to inculcate this habit in our mind.
 +
We see in karate and kungfu sports, persons are trained to break bricks with hands
 +
without being hurt or dipping the hands in fire without getting burnt. This is by
 +
practicing mind and organs to concentrate. Such practice can make us do anything.
 +
When mind is trained to see atman, he is admired as sthitaprajna. His intellect is
 +
set up firmly when nothing can disturb his mind. He can remain isolated without
 +
being affected by worldly affairs. This does not mean he will remain in solitude
 +
and be of no use to the society. He can do all the good works for the society
 +
without being influenced by others. By training mind to engage in atman we can
 +
perform all our duties efficiently. This will be perfected if the mind is further
 +
trained to engage in God, Who is the atman of all atman.
 +
We have seen all the four stages of Gyana yogi: Yatamana samgya, Vyatireka samgya,
 +
Yekendriya samgya and Vaseekara samgya.
 +
2.59
 +
visaya: vini-vartante nir-aaharasya dehinah
 +
rasa-varjam raso pyasya param � drishtva nivartate
 +
The sense objects are the food of the senses. From the abstinent embodied being,
 +
i.e., from one who has withdrawn his senses from objects, these sense-objects,
 +
being rejected by him,
 +
turn away, but not the relish for them. Relish means hankering. The meaning is
 +
that the hankering for the sense-objects does not go away by abstinence alone. But
 +
even this hankering will
 +
go away, when one sees that the essential nature of the self is superior to the
 +
sense-objects and that the realisation of this self gives greater happiness than
 +
the enjoyment of sense-objects.
 +
Krishna explains how to get rid of even the small traces of desires in Slokas
 +
59,60 and 61 , which all make one part. Sri Krishna says in 59th sloka, If we are
 +
able to visualize atman then all
 +
organs get disciplined, By comprehending atman in its true form, all other organs
 +
are controlled. It is interesting to note in the next 60th sloka. Arjuna asks
 +
what
 +
he should do to �see� atman and Sri Krishna replies that if Arjuna could control
 +
all organs, atman can be visualized. This normally will puzzle and confuse. One
 +
depending on other can never
 +
give a solution. But Sri Krishna removes the confusion in the 61st sloka. So we
 +
will have to see all these three slokas as one.
 +
Sensual objects of enjoyment are fuel for the senses. Lord Krishna states that the
 +
desire for these sensual objects departs when one starves them by restraining the
 +
senses from indulging in them. But although the action is restrained the craving
 +
remains subtly within the mind. Rasa is taste and raga is attachment. So the
 +
craving attachment for taste of sense objects remains present. However when the
 +
eternal nature of the soul is realised in all its glorious splendour and it is
 +
seen that it is infinitely more attractive than the most delightful sense object.
 +
At that time all desire for sense objects completely vanishes along with the
 +
residue of craving.
 +
nir-aaharasya dehinah: = Dehi is atman. Nir-Aharam means without food or
 +
starving. Enjoying the objects of the senses is known as ahara. Restricting the
 +
objects of the senses is known as niraharasya. What is food for atman? When atman
 +
is in a body, enjoyment by various organs is all food for atman. Taste is food
 +
for tongue but pleases atman. Music is food for ears but
 +
pleases atman. So if we have to starve atman, it means we have to prevent various
 +
organs in their desires.
 +
Visaya: vini-vartante = Visaya: all the objects for sense gratification
 +
(Roopa, Sparasha, Sabhda, Rasa:, Gandham) , Vini-varatante: Refraining
 +
Rasa-varjam = Rasam here means trace of desire. We can prevent various organs
 +
their food like listening for ears, scent for nose, etc. But the small trace of
 +
such desire lingers on. When one declines to enjoy sense objects with the objects
 +
of the senses the physical experience ceases; yet the residue desire for sense
 +
objects still remains and the craving for them actually has not departed.How to
 +
get rid of this trace?
 +
Param drishtva - Seeing the ultimate(param) tattvam i.e our Self (sat-cit-
 +
Ananda);
 +
Nivartate, raso'apyasya - even this trace of desire(raso apyasya) is removed.
 +
By concentrating on the eternal and quintessence of happiness �atman, and a
 +
glimpse of it will drive away this small trace also. After getting atman darshan,
 +
the small trace of desires lingering
 +
in the mind also is got rid off. When atman is in a body, if all desirable
 +
objects like tasty food, good music, etc, are removed it starves the organs and we
 +
do not indulge in such pleasures. But
 +
in the mind traces of these desires will be sticking. Many people have developed a
 +
custom of not eating or drinking certain type of food or drinks, but when such
 +
persons are in a company of
 +
friends who eat or drink such articles, there could be compulsions or curiosity to
 +
taste. By yielding to such temptation we may spoil our health. So it is better to
 +
avoid such events altogether
 +
and resist temptations. But even then mind will not get controlled. This can be
 +
suppressed only if we are able to have atman darshanam.
 +
The process of restriction from sense enjoyment by rules and regulations is
 +
something like restricting a diseased person from certain types of eatables. The
 +
patient, however, neither likes
 +
such restrictions nor loses his taste for eatables. Similarly, sense restriction
 +
by some spiritual process like astanga-yoga, in the matter of yama, niyama, asana,
 +
pranayama, pratyahara,
 +
dharana, dhyana, etc., is recommended for less intelligent persons who have no
 +
better knowledge. But one who has tasted the beauty of the Supreme Lord Krsna, in
 +
the course of his
 +
advancement in Krsna consciousness, no longer has a taste for dead material
 +
things. Therefore, restrictions are there for the less intelligent neophytes in
 +
the spiritual advancement of life,
 +
but such restrictions are only good if one actually has a taste for Krsna
 +
consciousness. When one is actually Krsna conscious, he automatically loses his
 +
taste for pale things.
 +
2.60
 +
yata-to-hyapi kaunteya purushasya vipascitah
 +
indriyaani pramaathini haranti prasabham manah
 +
"The senses are so strong and impetuous, O Arjuna, that they forcibly carry away
 +
the mind even of a man of discrimination who is endeavoring to control them."
 +
In the 59th sloka we saw that if atman darshan is available then all the organs
 +
and mind get controlled and there will not be a trace of desire for inferior
 +
pleasures. Nirahara, that is starving will
 +
prevent the organs from seeking such cheap pleasures but mind will still remain
 +
uncontrolled. If we can see the param or atman, then even this mind also gets
 +
controlled. So Arjuna queries
 +
as to what should be done to see atman or have atman darshan. Here we should
 +
understand that atman couldn t be seen with our eyes as we � see materialistic
 +
objects. Here it means feeling
 +
the atman. Its magnificence can be felt. In response, Krishna mentions in this
 +
sloka the following.
 +
If organs could be controlled atman darshan will be achieved. As told in the last
 +
lecture this is a peculiar situation. This is called anyonya asraya dosham or
 +
inter dependent fallacy. It is like asking location of A and in reply it is told
 +
it is by the side of B. where is B located and reply is it is by the side of A.
 +
this will create confusion. Here also it appears like that.
 +
In the previous sloka Sri Krishna told that if atman darshan is acquired, the
 +
organs get controlled. But here He says that controlling organs could enable one
 +
to achieve atman darshan.
 +
purushasya vipascitah : Vipaschita means one who can differentiate and understand
 +
or rational thinking. He is said to have viveka gyana. One who distinguishes that
 +
the body is perishable and
 +
atman is eternal. He tries to control organs and concentrates his mind on the
 +
atman. Purusha here indicates atman.
 +
yata-to-hyapi : Yati is effort and api means EVEN. So, even a person who tries to
 +
take efforts in Gyana yoga, is the meaning of first part. So, Krishna is
 +
referring to not an ordinary person,
 +
but somebody who is accomplished in viveka gynana, knows the difference between
 +
Atma and Body, pursues sincerely Gyaana Yoga. The second part of the sloka says
 +
that , even for such sincere people, the senses are difficult to overcome. For
 +
him also the organs and mind will not get controlled.
 +
indriyaani pramaathini : Senses are very strong , turbulent (pramaathini). The
 +
strength of the senses are our desires. That is the strength of seeking pleasure
 +
or desire. This desire is in the
 +
mind and the organs exhibit this as strength.
 +
haranti prasabham manah : The organs compel(haranti) mind and drag it in their
 +
way. This desire becomes ammunition for organs and so they are able to forcibly
 +
(prasabham) take in their
 +
direction. Like a hurricane uprooting large trees the desire in the organs uproot
 +
the mind.
 +
In Thiruvaimozhi [7.1.1] Alwar says that he has five tenants in his house. But
 +
they are all enemies. That is in his body [house] the five organs are occupying as
 +
tenants and are forcing him in their way. In emma veetu thiran poem, he complains
 +
to God that He is partial and rescues an elephant Gajendra but not the Alwar. God
 +
told that it was an animal and was suffering for the past 1000 years seizeed by a
 +
crocodile, so He had to rescue. Alwar replies that then it is all the more he
 +
deserves immediate rescue. Compared to the big elephant he is a weaker being. The
 +
elephant was suffering only for 1000 years while the Alwar has been suffering for
 +
thousands of births. One crocodile grabbed the elephant while five crocodiles in
 +
the form of organs have seized the Alwar. So organs are a great menace to all
 +
including the Nithyasuris who are doing intimate service to the Lord at Vaikuntam.
 +
We see persons doing very noble service to the Lord in temples. But they are not
 +
free from the power of senses. We are daily witnessing the fights for position and
 +
greed for money in such
 +
persons involved in sacred assignments also. This is the domination of senses in
 +
persons. The organs function very well in youth time, but the mind is
 +
uncontrollable. When the person becomes old his mind is some what controlled but
 +
now the organs do not function properly.
 +
Sense organs are so strong that they dictate even learned persons. One situated
 +
in spiritual intelligence with discrimination and powers of observation trying
 +
their level best to keep the mind
 +
from gravitating towards the senses and withdrawing their mind repeatedly away
 +
from objects of the senses and directing it internally within is a form of
 +
meditation. But the senses are so
 +
strong that they forcibly invade the mind, disrupt this meditation and forcibly
 +
overpower the mind and indulge it in contemplating sense gratification and bodily
 +
attachment. How is it possible
 +
that the senses can carry away ones mind while they are intently striving? It is
 +
because the senses are so restless and turbulent that they totally disregarding
 +
all ones efforts in discrimination,
 +
besieging the mind they direct it towards sensual objects that will gratify these
 +
self-same senses by engaging the mind in sense contemplation.So to control them
 +
it is necessary to have
 +
atman darshan. Sri Krishna says controlling the organs is difficult even for
 +
viveka gyana persons. We should see the subtle difference Sri Krishna is making.
 +
He did not say control the organs
 +
to get atman darshan. But He says even for rational thinking people, controlling
 +
sense organs is difficult! It gives an impression that there is a negative
 +
thinking by Sri Krishna that controlling
 +
organs is not possible and so atman darshan is never possible. But actually, He
 +
drives home the great effort required to bring the organs in control. Also when we
 +
see the next 61st sloka then
 +
the real import of this sloka will be clear.

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