I find myself turning to the Gita at different times in my life and every time I have read parts of it I have almost always walked away with something new. The Gita is essentially the war within. The battle to find meaning. The important of seeking an understanding of the Constant. The Gita is time tested for me and provides me with inner nourishment when most needed. The words have a tendency to speak to what needs to be heard. More importantly when it needs to be heard. It has the effect of speaking to my being - every time. The wholeness of the Gita and the sense of oneness it brings to me tends to lift me up from feelings of despair.
Chapter 15 of the Gita is where the very essence of everything lies. Chapter 15 has 20 verses. This chapter is considered the core of the Gita. It talks about the need to detach. It providers a higher platform to function from. So I have to mention it here as a way to remind myself of the work that lies ahead.
11Those who strive with discipline
can see the fraction of the lord
situated in their own self.
But those who are selfish and insensitive
fail to see, however hard they try.
12The radiance
of the sun which lights up the world,
the radiance in the moon and in fire –
I am the source of all that radiance.
13Entering the
earth,
I support all creatures with my energy;
becoming the life-giving sap,
I nourish all plants and herbs.
14Having entered the bodies of creatures as the digestive fire
and working along with inward and outward breaths,
I digest the four kinds of food.
15I am seated in the hearts of all;
I grant memory and knowledge,
and I also make them disappear!
I know all the Vedas and
I am the author of the Upanishads
I am the one who is to be known in them.
16There are two entities in this world:
ksharam and aksharam.
Ksharam consists of all beings
(yet to be liberated).
Aksharam refers to those
that are immutable
(the liberated beings).
17But above these two entities,
there is a higher principle:
the supreme soul, the ultimate person,
known as the eternal god
who sustains and pervades the universe.
18I am beyond ksharam and
I am superior to aksharam.
So I am respected as the supreme spirit
by the people and in the Vedas alike.
19One who is free from delusion
knows me as the Supreme Spirit;
indeed, he knows all there is to know
and he wholeheartedly worships Me.
20Arjuna, I have taught you a great truth.
He who learns this will become enlightened and
will have accomplished everything.
I have often considered this verse in my interactions with the outside world. I forget that things are just an illusion and our attachment to this is often what keeps us stuck within.
http://www.gitamrta.org/listen_bhagavad_gita_english.html
Chapter 15 of the Gita is where the very essence of everything lies. Chapter 15 has 20 verses. This chapter is considered the core of the Gita. It talks about the need to detach. It providers a higher platform to function from. So I have to mention it here as a way to remind myself of the work that lies ahead.
Krishna
1The wise speak of the perennial Ashvattha tree,
which has roots above and branches below.
The leaves protecting it are the Vedas.
One who knows this, truly knows.
1The wise speak of the perennial Ashvattha tree,
which has roots above and branches below.
The leaves protecting it are the Vedas.
One who knows this, truly knows.
The tender sprouts of this tree
are the senses nourished by the
gunas.
Gunas refers to the inherent tendency or temperament of a person.
The branches extend both above and below.
The secondary roots going downward represent actions
that bind the individual soul to earthly existence.
3The true
nature of this tree –
its basis, beginning, or end –
is not readily perceived.
with the sharp axe of detachment.
4Then seek that eternal goal –
attaining which one is liberated –
by submitting yourself
to the supreme purusha,
the primal cause of
this ancient universe
and its relentless activity.
5Free from false pride and delusion,
overcoming the burden of attachment,
renouncing desires entirely,
always conscious of the atman, and
unaffected by pairs of opposites
such as pleasure and pain,
the wise reach that eternal goal.
6Neither sun
nor moon nor fire
can illuminate that state;
it is verily my supreme abode and
having gone there, you will not return.
7A fragment of my own self becomes
the soul in the world of mortals.
It attracts towards itself
the five senses and the mind,
which are a part of the body.
8When one acquires a body or departs from it,
the master within carries these senses,
just as the wind carries scents
from one place to another.
9Through the mind, the ear, the eye,
and the organs of touch, smell, and taste,
the atman experiences the sensations.
10The deluded ones fail to perceive the atman
residing, entering, or departing the body.
They also fail to see the atman
enjoying the sensations
as well as being impacted by the gunas.
The branches extend both above and below.
The secondary roots going downward represent actions
that bind the individual soul to earthly existence.
Ashvattha is the sacred fig tree (Ficus religiosa); it is used as a metaphor for existence. The roots above show our spiritual dimension, whereas the branches below depict our material bondages. Material existence is rooted in the spiritual. The perennial nature of the tree represents cycles of birth and death. Just as the leaves nourish the tree, knowledge (the Vedas) nourishes human life. One who understands this metaphor truly understands both the spiritual and material dimensions of life
its basis, beginning, or end –
is not readily perceived.
It is
difficult for us mortals to be a part of life and understand it too. The only
thing we know for certain is that life goes on.
Cut down this
firmly-rooted tree with the sharp axe of detachment.
4Then seek that eternal goal –
attaining which one is liberated –
by submitting yourself
to the supreme purusha,
the primal cause of
this ancient universe
and its relentless activity.
5Free from false pride and delusion,
overcoming the burden of attachment,
renouncing desires entirely,
always conscious of the atman, and
unaffected by pairs of opposites
such as pleasure and pain,
the wise reach that eternal goal.
Atman
is the inner, higher self.
can illuminate that state;
it is verily my supreme abode and
having gone there, you will not return.
Here, ‘that
state’ refers to the state of brahman, the supreme being. The supreme
abode is self-luminous, beyond all light. ‘…you will not return’ indicates that
no force can dislodge you from there.
7A fragment of my own self becomes
the soul in the world of mortals.
It attracts towards itself
the five senses and the mind,
which are a part of the body.
8When one acquires a body or departs from it,
the master within carries these senses,
just as the wind carries scents
from one place to another.
We acquire a
body when we are born; we depart from it when we die. Here, ‘the master within’
refers to the soul, the eternal witness which carries the vasanas (past
baggage).
9Through the mind, the ear, the eye,
and the organs of touch, smell, and taste,
the atman experiences the sensations.
‘Sensations’
are the experiences of sound, sight, smell, taste, and touch but in a broader
sense, it refers to the worldly pleasures and pains that one
feels.
10The deluded ones fail to perceive the atman
residing, entering, or departing the body.
They also fail to see the atman
enjoying the sensations
as well as being impacted by the gunas.
Gunas refer to the inherent nature of all beings. But those with the eye of wisdom perceive this.
They sense
the atman at all times.
11Those who strive with discipline
can see the fraction of the lord
situated in their own self.
But those who are selfish and insensitive
fail to see, however hard they try.
The selfish
ones are too full of themselves
and fail to
see anything else.
Preoccupied
with lower motives, they miss out on the higher ideals.
the radiance in the moon and in fire –
I am the source of all that radiance.
I support all creatures with my energy;
becoming the life-giving sap,
I nourish all plants and herbs.
14Having entered the bodies of creatures as the digestive fire
and working along with inward and outward breaths,
I digest the four kinds of food.
Foods that
are chewed, foods that are sucked,
foods that
are eaten by licking, and foods that are gulped/drunk
are the four
kinds of food.
15I am seated in the hearts of all;
I grant memory and knowledge,
and I also make them disappear!
Perhaps a
part of our memory and knowledge should recede if we want to function
coherently. For example, we know death is certain, yet we are able to live
without being troubled by that idea every day.
I know all the Vedas and
I am the author of the Upanishads
I am the one who is to be known in them.
Upanishads
are the concluding portion of the Vedas.
Vedas are
the foremost revealed scriptures in Hinduism.
The initial
portions of the Vedas largely comprise contextual knowledge, while the
Upanishads mainly contain universal wisdom. One needs to know both and use them
appropriately.
16There are two entities in this world:
ksharam and aksharam.
Ksharam consists of all beings
(yet to be liberated).
Aksharam refers to those
that are immutable
(the liberated beings).
Ksharam
refers to something that is changing
while
aksharam refers to something that is beyond change.
Another way
of looking at this verse is by considering
ksharam
as a reference to all beings, and
aksharam
as a reference to the individual soul.
17But above these two entities,
there is a higher principle:
the supreme soul, the ultimate person,
known as the eternal god
who sustains and pervades the universe.
18I am beyond ksharam and
I am superior to aksharam.
So I am respected as the supreme spirit
by the people and in the Vedas alike.
The idea of
a higher power is shared by the learned.
19One who is free from delusion
knows me as the Supreme Spirit;
indeed, he knows all there is to know
and he wholeheartedly worships Me.
20Arjuna, I have taught you a great truth.
He who learns this will become enlightened and
will have accomplished everything.
---------------------------------------------
http://www.gitamrta.org/listen_bhagavad_gita_english.html
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