Bhagawat Gita
Bhagawat Gita
Bhagawat Gita
all their strength, my mouth has gone dry, my body is trembling, and the
hairs on my body are standing on end.
Chapter 2: Arjunas Enquiry
Krishna feels Arjunas pain and suffering, but calls him out for whimpering
like a child. Arjuna, taken aback by this, explains his dilemma more
concisely and finally asks Krishna to help him with this seemingly
unresolvable inner conflict. Sisyasteham, I am your student. In sutra 211 the Krishna begins his teaching and the Gita officially commences.
Chapter 2 is the most important of all, as it contains the essence of the
whole teaching. It begins with the immutability of aatmaa, which is
beyond birth and death. If one were to only master this, success would
arrive. From sutras 55 72, krishna describes stable wisdom, the living
embodiment of an awakened one, a wise one who knows the Truth of
wholeness. All the knowledge that is needed for enlightenment is
presented. Understanding the nature of desire is the key.
Verse 48: Remaining steadfast in yoga, oh! Dhanajaya, perform actions,
abandoning attachment, remaining the same to success and failure alike.
This evenness of mind is called yoga.
Chapter 3: On the Nature of Action (Karma)
Arjuna recognizes that he wants total freedom, moksha, enlightenment,
nothing less. And yet Krishna has told him to get off his ass and join the
battle. In India, there is a strong tradition of sunnyaasa, a life renunciating
worldly possessions and rsponsibilities to pursue knowledge. Sometimes
this comes after raising a family, but it can come at any time in ones life.
Arjuna tells Krishna that he wants to be a sunnyaasi to gain knowledge.
He definitely does not want to fight.
Krishna goes on to explain the nature of action or karma, and describes
what karma yoga is. Much of the Vedic tradition revolves around rituals
and pujas, ceremonial actions and prayers. Krishna explains that action
does not require a doer, that is a separate egoic self that thinks he or
she is acting. The belief in this separate self is the source of suffering,
leading to endless harmful actions in the world. The teaching returns to
studying the nature of desire.of likes and dislikes. Not to try to eliminate
them, which is just another desire, but to see them for what they are and
not be held prisoner by them.
Verse 5: Indeed no one ever exists for even a second without performing
action because everyone, being helpless, is made to perform action by
the gunas (tamas, rajas and sattva) born of prakriti.
Chapter 4: Karma Yoga: The Renunciation of Action Through
Knowledge
Krishna begins by explaining the history of the teaching, how it originated
with Isvara (Krishna) and has been handed down from teacher to student
over a multitude of generations. An avatar is the absolute divinity
manifesting in human body, like Krishna, who appears on the planet when
dharma has been disturbed to reawaken timeless knowlege. Krishna has
a human form, but is also timeless wisdom. Birth and death are just
transitory phenomena and as such he is beyond action. As we will see in
the last 6 chapters, this is the truth of all beings. We just dont know this.
To be truly free one has to recognize that ones nature is free of all action,
unbounded by time and space. (See Yoga Sutras I-2 and I-3). Krishna now
goes into levels of reality. There is an empirical reality: the sun moon,
stars, birds, bees, flowers and trees etc. Then there is a subjective reality,
the projection we create in our mind from our experiences. But ultimately
both are expressions of wholeness, a single reality, Brahman. Of interest
to yogis, Krishna introduces the gunas, the three qualities of energy,
specifically here relating to the types of human minds. Again we see
parallels to Patanjali. Krishna explains to Arjuna that when acts in the
world from knowledge, from wisdom, one is free. One does not have to
drop out of the world to renounce the false self that believes it is acting.
Dont run off to the Himalayas! Stand up and live the life that is already
unfolding.
Verse 24: brahmaarpanam brahmahavirbrahmaagnau brahmanaa hutam
brahmaiva tena gantavyam brahmakarmasamaadhinaa
The means of offering is Brahman. The oblation is Brahman, offered by
Brahman, into the fire, which is Brahman. Brahman is indeed to be
reached by him who sees everything as Brahman.
Chapter 5: Renunciation: Sannyaasa-Yoga
Arjuna still has doubts. He still believes that renuniciation is the key to
liberation, moksha. Krishna has praised both karma yoga
and sannyaasa yoga, so Arjuna asks which is better? Both lead to
liberation but these paths present two very different life-styles. Krishna
explains that sannyaasa, although it may look like an easier, faster path,
is actually much more difficult, as there is a certain depth of
understanding needed before one can truly be a sannyaasi. It is not for
beginners. Karma yoga actually prepares one for sannyaasa, but it is not a
particular practice, like pranayama. It is your whole life, moment by
moment. You cannot spend every moment of your life doing pranayama!
In sutra 5-20 Krishna uses the term sthira-buddhi, one whose knowledge is
unshakable. Variations on the Sanskrit root stha, stable, steady, appear
all through the Gita and the Yoga Sutras. In sutra I-3, Patanjali saysTada
drashtuhu svarupe avasthanam, Then, ones self-knowledge, the
recognition of the true nature, the sva-rupe, of the Self, remains stable.
We find in the Gita an 18 chapter elaboration on this sutra. At the end of
chapter 5, Krishna introduces dhyana, meditation, as a way to develop
stability in the mind. This will be the topic of Chapter 6.
Verse 11: Giving up attachment, karma-yogis perform action purely
(without attachment) with the body, mind, intellect, and also by the
senses, for the purification of the mind.
Chapter 6: On Meditation (Dhyana)
In Patanjalis first chapter, he distinguishes between two types of
meditation (samadhi). The first is with a seed or form (sabija samadhi)
to to sustain the mind and weaken the tendencies of the mind to wander
into trouble some waters. The second is letting the mind rest in the
infinite, nirbija or seedless samadhi. This latter is the meditation Krishna
presents to Arjuna. It is resting in grace.
If liberation is giving up action, the sense that I am a doer, that requires
giving up the urge to follow desires. And you cant give those up unless
you know you are already whole, so how do you break the cycle? One
aspect of meditation is the process of noticing habits and tendencies that
disturb the peace of the mind. We have been hypnotized by our own
confusion and we have to de-hynotize ourselves. A disciplined approach
has to be undertaken to overcome the confusion. Krishna describe sitting
meditation, in a quiet, clean and uncluttered place, to purify the mind. He
again uses the terms sthira and sthitah, to indicate a sense of unwavering
steadiness. Thus the yogi becomes free from sorrow.
Verses 34 and 35: Arjuna says: As we all know, Krishna, the mind is
agitation, a strong, well rooted tyrant. I think of it as impossible to
control as the wind. Krishna replies No doubt, O mighty-armed (Arjuna),
the agitated mind is very difficult to control. But, oh son of Kunti, by
abhyaasa (practice) and vairagyam (objectivity), it is mastered.
See PYS I-12 (abhyassa vairagyabyam tan nirodhah)
Chapters 7 12: Parameshvara; Creator and Creation are One,
Brahman
Chapter 7: Jaana Vijaana Yoga (The complete knowledge of
Brahman)
Here jaana signifies an indirect knowledge, as differentiated from direct
knowledge, vijnana, implying that Krishna is revealing the truth of himself,
not some other kind of truth. It is immediate, absolute, no questions left,
no doubts lingering. Krishna tells Arjuna that this knowledge is rare in the
world. Very few seek it at this level, and of the ones who do, still fewer
come to full realization. This is said not to scare Arjuna, but to intrigue
him.
Krishan introduces the term prakrti but uses the term in a slightly different
way from Patanjali. Krishna calls the manifest universe apara prakrti, the
world of form, the elements etc. Para prakrti is the unchanging source or
primordial cause of the apara prakrti. In the Yoga Sutras, Purusha is the
unchanging unmanifest para prakrti but, as the sutras are primarily
dualistic, is said to be separate from prakrti in moksha. In Vedanta, there
is wholeness, not duality.
Next comes the nature of causation; how the universe comes into being.
Krishna says I am the cause of the entire creation and its ultimate
dissolution. This takes some explanation, teasing apart the unchanging
from the transient forms that come and go, and yet seeing that they are
not different or separate, but just different orders of reality. Krishna
recognizes that is is easy to get lost in the world of form, maya, and lose
the unchanging infinite source, and offers devotion as a way to find the
divine in the ordinary.
Verse 1: Sri Bhagavan said: O Paartha, please listen to the way in which
you will know me totally, without any doubt, by taking to yoga, with a
mind committed to Me and having surrendered to Me.
Chapter 8 Askara Brahma Yoga (Limitless Brahman)
At the end of chapter 7 Krishna introduces the word Brahman and
describes how a wise man, even at the time of death, recognizes ultimate
truth. Arjuna begins chapter 8 by asking about Brahman and what
happens at death. Krishna returns to contemplation on Parameshvara and
adds the chanting OM to realize Brahman. A discussion of the nature the
celestial realms (lokas) and cosmic time scales (yugas), and the cycles of
birth and death help Arjuna distinguish between the world of change and
the unchanging Brahman. Death does not grantmoksha, only knowledge
can do that. Prayers and rituals alone cannot grant moksha, even though
they are desirable. Brahma-vidyaa, direct knowledge of Brahman alone
brings freedom. This chapter is compared to theUpanishads, whose
subject matter is also Brahma-vidyaa.
Verse 8: O! Partha, reflecting as he was taught, with a mind endowed with
the practice of yoga, with a mind that does not stray to anything else, he
reaches the limitless, self-effulgent person. (Purusha)
Chapter 9: The King of all Knowledge, The King of Secrets
In the previous chapter, Krishna mentions the brahma lokha, but wants to
clarify that getting to heaven is not moksha. Only through knowledge,
Brahma-Vidya, which Krishna has been unfolding since chapter 2 is this
possible. But there is many ways to become confused or lost, in the world
of time and space, of body, mind, ritual and desire. The knowledge is said
to be secret because even if you hear the teachings, it is rarely
understood. Also, it is not arrived at by the normal means of acquiring
knowledge, like perception or inference. But with total commitment,
compassion, faith, grace and devotion, success is near. A mature mind is
needed for spiritual knowledge and these virtues, when cultivated, lead to
maturity.
Verse 14: Those who are always appreciating Me, and amking the
neccessary efforts, whose commitment is firm and who remain
surrendered to Me with devotion, who are always united to ME (with a
prayerful heart) seek Me.
Chapter 10: The Glories of Bhaagavan
Everything is Bhagavan, the Divinity, and the name used for Krishna
throughout the Gita. Bhagavan means one who has bhaga, the six aspects
of fullness, or the six absolute virtues. They are all riches, all strength, all
fame, all beauty, all knowledge, and all renunciation. All pursuits are
ultimately the pursuit of Bhagavan, atmaa, Brahman. Bhagavan is not
only all forms, all manifestations, all creation, but also the source, the
creator, who remains unmoved, aham sthitah, amidst the impermanence.
Verse 19: Well now, O! Best of the Kurus, Arjuna. I will tell you My divine
glories in keeping with their importance; because there is no end to a
detailed description of My glories.
This is the longest chapter, 78 verses and Krishnas teaching ends with a
restatement of the first teaching verse. Giving up all karmas, take refuge
in Me alone. I will release you from all karma; do not grieve. Patanjalis
Yoga Sutras also give Ishvara Pranidhana, surrender to Ishvara, the
Divinity , a mojor role on overcoming the impediments to drashtuh
[/two_third]
[one_third_last]
Related Links
Yoga in the Gita
Essential Verses of the Gita
Sthita Prajna (Stable Wisdom)
[/one_third_last]
RECENT POSTS
the energy
world.
2. Feel the line as opposite radians moving to and from a center.
3. Feel that integration of 1 and 2 create a dynamic spiral field with
pulsations.
Energetic fields in Life:
1. Relational Fields: Personal: Emotional fields, Physiological fields,
embryological fields (see below) psychological fields, Spirit fields, Soul Fields
(seeDream Work below)
Spirals:
This can be done facing sideways to the wall as
well. Find the ascending and descending spirals as a balance of flexion and
extension. In seated twists, balance both clockwise and counter-clockwise
directions, no matter what direction the outer body is taking. Ask each chakra
which way it wants to go. Feel the spirals as waves moving through the fluid
body so there is no effort involved. You may be surprised at what happens.
developing
an architecture of dream travel which includes
suggestions and imagery that allow the deep imagination to emerge and
grow. Deep imagination is the source of all creativity and in our
journeying/active dreaming, we hope to unite our personal imagination with
the cosmic imagination, the imagination that births the universe. In our work,
we create structures, find portals and negotiate with gate-keepers as part of
our imaginal journeying. It takes practice to work at this level and the more
time we spend here, the easier and more familiar it becomes.
A word about the inner skeptic. We love our inner skeptic, as it plays an
important role in helping us discriminate and differentiate the layers and
meanings of our experiences. However, the skeptic should not be allow to
interfere in the journeying, but rather surrender the floor to the imaginal, and
at the end of the journey, be available for commentary. Many beginners
struggle to open to the active dream world because their skeptic makes too
much noise!
In Boston we explored two scenarios I have discovered in my course with
Robert:
Visiting the Library
Lying in a comfortable position, relaxing muscles, bones and breath, drop into
savasana and let the mind deepen and widen. Visualize a library. It can be
one you have visited in your life, current, from childhood or college, or you
can make one up. But see the building. Notice its architecture, materials,
windows, and plantings. Take your time, relax and observe. When you revisit
the library on future journeys, there will be some familiar sites and you can
stabilize some of the basic structures.
of
the basic structures.
Like the library, walk in the door and go up to the counter. You will ask for
your undelivered dreams. Many dreams get sent back because they were
unable to be delivered, so you may be giving a huge bin full of undelivered
dreams. Take the bin to a place where you can sit and relax and pick one to
open. If it is junk mail, put it aside and open another, until something of
interest shows up. This begins the second stage where the now delivered
dream takes you on another journey. Follow and enjoy for as long as possible.
When you return to waking consciousness, take notes, draw pictures, recall
the imagery. Record in your dream journal.
In future blogs, as we build the Dream time practices, I will go into more
detail how to interpret our experiences. But, first and foremost, the imagery
and symbolism of your dreams is unique to you, and only you can truly
interpret what they are saying. This is not to say that guidance for one with
experience cannot be extremely helpful. It can. And there are many
archetypal images and symbols that are relatively universal. But the dream
world is uniquely yours. Trust you own intuitions, and be patient.