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GUIDEPOSTS FOR LIVING The Bhagavad Gita
Joy Mills
The Bhagavad Gita is one of the world’s great spiritual
texts to which we may look for guidance for living a meaningful or a
significant existence. Through centuries
it has inspired thinkers, scholars, social activists, and people from all walks
of life. It has been translated into
nearly as many languages as are spoken on the planet, and commentaries on it
have been produced throughout time. It
is a work that belongs as much to the Western world as to the Eastern, for it
speaks to every individual who has ever faced a seemingly insoluble
problem. The Gita speaks to each one of
us confronted by the existential dilemma of choice.
The Gita is one part of the great epic of India, the Mahabharata, which contains eighteen
books; the Gita, which contains eighteen chapters or discourses, is part of the
sixth book. The epic itself has a
historical setting, but that is not our present concern, for in addition to its
context as part of a great story, the Gita has both an archetypal, or
universal, aspect and an individual aspect as represented by its human
protagonist, Arjuna. It is both personal
and transpersonal.
Central to understanding the Gita is the concept of yoga, or
what has been called the path of conscious self-realization. According to the colophons, each discourse is
an exposition of yoga. Yoga is both a
practical discipline and the goal of self-integration, of complete harmonization
of the individual soul with the Supreme Self.
It is because we are dealing with that process known as yoga that the
Bhagavad Gita is truly a guidepost for living—not only living the spiritual
life but living in the here and now of daily existence with all its joys and
sorrows.
Professor S. Dasgupta, in his History of Indian Philosophy, has stated that the Gita is not only
a “system of philosophy” but more important, “a manual of right conduct and
right perspective of things in the light of a mystical approach to God in
self-resignation, devotion, friendship, and humility.” It is as such a guide to our conduct and to
gaining the right perspective on all that occurs that we will look together at
this beautiful text.
Let us begin at the beginning. Dharmakshetra
kurukshetra are the first two words of our text, a text that is truly a
gita—song, a chant, the music or harmony of the Supreme embodied as Krishna, the mediator between the realm of the eternal
and the world of our mundane existence. Dharmakshetra kurukshetra . . . in those
two words we have the crux of our own dilemma, the central problem that every
individual must eventually resolve.
Kshetra means, a
field, a demarcated area or domain. It
is where something takes place. It
is here, now, this life, this existence,
this present moment. And in this present
moment, in this nowness of our existence, two voices are heard.
The first is the voice of dharma—not an easy word to
define. Dharma is duty, righteousness,
law, and lawfulness; it is truth, responsibility, order, religion. Dharma is the voice that calls us to fulfill
our responsibility as a human being, whatever may be our occupation, our
educational background, our place in life.
Dharma sustains and nourishes our
very existence, gives it its integrity, its meaning. Here and now, in the midst of this life, we
must come awake to our dharma, to be what we are intended to be. So the first word of the Gita, dharmakshetra
in Sanskrit, defines for us the place or field of our unique responsibility.
But of the place where the battle is to occur is not only
the field of our dharma; but the second word of the text tells us it is the
field of the Kurus. In terms of the epic
of which the Gita is a part, this means, of course, the family from which both
sides in the coming battle were descended.
So at one level we can recognize that even as we are situated on the
field of our individual duty, our dharma, we are also located on the field of
all our relationships. But in Sanskrit, kuru is also one form of the verb “to
do,” so kurukshetra could also mean “the field of our doings or the field of
human actions,” seen in relation to the community of which we are part.
So in these opening two words, two voices call to us: the voice of our individual dharma and the
voice of our responsibility as a member of a particular community. At the outset, we know we are on the field of
action in the more embracing, more encompassing field of dharma. And since each individual’s dharma includes
all the psychological, familiar, social, and traditional laws or customs that
govern each of us, as well as our duty to each of these structures, that also
means that at the same time our dharma includes our responsibility to or own
inner nature. So we often find ourselves
in conflict among all these obligations.
In fact, conflict is inevitable. How
many crossroads have you come to in your life?
How many times have you asked yourself, as well as friends, relatives,
elders, “What shall I do?” It may even
be the question: “Shall I do what I want
to do, or must I do what my parents want me to do?” And perhaps in despair we seek to abandon
ourselves to no action at all, only to realize that even inaction is action.
While Annie Besant has titled discourse 1 “The Despondency
of Arjuna,” many translators have called it, “The Yoga of Despair.” And indeed it may be suggested that despair,
despondency, the darkness that may at times overwhelm us and obscure our vision
of what is to be done, is in itself a yoga, or at least a stage on the yogic
path to self-awakening. Often it is that
very despair that drives us to seek understanding if not wisdom, to venture
forth on the arduous road toward knowledge, freedom, truth. And it is here that we need to note a
significant action taken by Arjuna, an action that I suggest is essential if we
are to walk the path toward enlightenment.
In many ways this is the first of the guideposts found in our text.
That action is described in verses 21 through 23 of
discourse 1: Simply put, Arjuna has
asked his charioteer—who is Krishna of course,
representative of the Supreme—to take him to the center between the two armies
who have gathered for the impending battle.
In the words of verse 21: “In the
midst between the two armies, stay my chariot.”
When faced with any problem, it is essential to center ourselves, to
come to the center where there is silence, and there to “stay my chariot,” a
metaphor for the personality. In that
inner quietude we may hear the voice of the
Self, of Krishna, of the One who abides
beyond all opposites. It has been said
that Krishna never comes uninvited. We must be still to hear his voice, and only
when we are centered can we ask the question, as Arjuna did.
In discourse 2 verse 54, Arjuna asks a very practical
question: How does the wise person, the
one who is “stable of mind,” act? How does
he talk, sit, and walk? Arjuna asks this
question, in one form or another throughout the dialogue. For example, in discourse 14 verse 21, after
hearing about the three qualities that compose the realm of matter, Arjuna
asks, “What are the marks of him who hath crossed over the three qualities . .
. ? How acteth he . . . ?” Arjuna is a practical person. He has come to Krishna,
as we know, with a direct question:
“What shall I do?” Of course when
he asks that question at the outset of the dialogue, his mind is already made
up: “ I will not fight,” he says and lays down his arms.
Carefully, step by step, Krishna
like the true teacher he is instructs Arjuna in all that action and even
inaction involve. He does not begin by
talking about the individual who has achieved liberation and has transcended
all relationships. Krishna
does not even answer his question directly, but he pictures for Arjuna the
individual who lives in the world fulfilling his responsibilities while at the
same time completely detached from any desire for the fruit of action. For such an individual, actions are directed
toward the welfare of the world, an emphasis that finds expression in verse 25
of discourse 3: “As the ignorant act
from attachment to action, so should the wise act without attachment desiring
the welfare of the world”.
Act Arjuna will; act we all will, always remembering that
action is not confined to the physical realm.
For there is action of thought, of emotion, of speech and mind as well
as of body. Indeed, as Krishna
says in verse 17 of discourse 4, “Mysterious is the path of action” and in
verse 18, “He who seeth inaction in action, and action in inaction, he is wise
. . . he is harmonious even while performing all action.” Yet even as we act, we must recognize, as
verse 46 of discourse 18 tells us, “All undertakings indeed are clouded by
defects as fire by smoke.” So it is how
we act that is important, and for this Arjuna asks again and again for
practical, and everyday illustrations of how the wise person talks and sits and
walks and moves about in the world. And
to answer this Krishna—in discourse 12—gives
Arjuna and therefore us some very practical advice. Verses 13 through 20 of discourse 12 give us
some extremely useful, though not always easy, guidelines for our everyday
movements in the world.
Verse 13 of discourse 12 begins on what one commentator has
called a “low negative key.” The verse
opens with the words “He who beareth no ill-will to any being . . .” If we can
pause there to examine ourselves, we will see that we like some people and
dislike others; we like some beings—dogs and cats, for example—and not
others—snakes and spiders, perhaps. The
whole of our phenomenal life is marked by a tension between our likes and
dislikes. And these are really only a
manifestation of our attachments, for even our aversions are sticky
attachments. So to “bear no ill-will to
any being” is not quite as easy as it may first appear. Even without an active desire to do harm to
another creature, we may carry a grudge against someone or feel jealousy or
envy. We may feel slighted or hurt and then almost unconsciously hope that
the one who has hurt us will suffer some mishap.
After that negative beginning, Krishna
proceeds with the first two positive virtues, “friendly and
compassionate.” We are not only to
remove any feeling of ill will. We are
to begin by practicing friendship. Let
everyone be recognized as a friend, in unconditional friendship. In the Yoga Sutras, Patanjali puts maitri at the head of all the factors
that purify the mind. Sutra 33 of
Section I begins with the Sanskrit words “Maitri Karuna,” and Dr. Taimni
translates this sutra: “The mind becomes
clarified by cultivating attitudes of friendliness, compassion, gladness and
indifference respectively toward happiness, misery, virtue and vice.” The essence of friendliness is sympathy, even
an empathy. In friendship, there is a
predisposition to listen and to understand the other. This quality of friendliness goes to the very
root of right relationship.
From friendliness to compassion is a natural movement of the
heart. To be a friend to all that lives
means that one is compassionate, caring, one to whom all life is precious. The one who is full of friendliness and
sympathy naturally feels compassion for all who suffer. There needs to be an unqualified compassion,
a natural flow outward. Once total
friendliness and compassion flower, we begin to lose our sense of
possessiveness. So the next phrase in
verse 13, “without attachment and egoism.”
The last thing to dissolve and become nonexistent is the sense of a
separate self, ahamkara or
egoism. And this condition results in a
state described in the concluding words of the verse, “balanced in pleasure and
pain, and forgiving.” When we realize
that pleasure and pain “come and go impermanent” as Krishna has said in
discourse 2, when we are free of attachment and aversion, friendly and
compassionate, no longer under the sway of egoism, then forgiveness flowers
within us, which is also patience and forbearance.
Verse 14 continues the list of qualities exhibited by the
“sage of stable mind,” the way in which action should be performed: “Ever content, harmonious, with the self
controlled, resolute, with mind and Reason [Buddhi] dedicated to Me . . .” To be “ever content” implies a cheerfulness
under all conditions, that cheerfulness spoken of as one of the points of good
conduct in At the Feet of the Master. Krishna
speaks of the same quality again in verse 16 of discourse 17, where it is called
“serenity of mind,” a serenity that cannot be disturbed by any external or
internal cause, under any conditions.
The whole being is in a harmonious state, with the entire personality
complex under control. When the
individual has achieved this harmony, then, without effort, the mind and the
intelligence or Reason (as Dr. Besant
translates buddhi) come to rest in
the Divine. That individual, says Krishna,
“is dear to Me.” To be dear to Krishna is to be at home with one’s soul, with one’s
inmost self, to be friends with that Self.
Then in each of the succeeding verses, that dearness is defined, further
aiding Arjuna to understand how action is to be performed.
Verse 15 declares the relationship that should exist between
the wise person and the world. “He from
whom the world doth not shrink away, who doth not shrink away from the world,
freed from the anxieties of joy, anger, and fear . . .” Here we
are reminded of the verse already cited from discourse 3, that all our
actions are to be directed toward the welfare of the world. The “sage of stable mind,” as the wise
individual has been called, does not live away from the world. He may be said to be in the world but not of
it. Such a person feels deep concern for
our common humanity. We are to be
friendly and compassionate, so that the world does not shrink away form us, nor
do we turn against the world. What
wisdom we have is to be employed to aid the world, to aid suffering humanity, but we do so without fear and
certainly without anger.
When we make ourselves available to the world, not shrinking
from that contact, what is our nature like?
Verse 16 describes the attitude we should have: “He who wants nothing . . . is pure, expert,
passionless, untroubled . . .” To be
pure is to be untainted by worldly standards.
We may not feel we are “expert” in knowing how to aid the world, but
when we are “pure in heart,” there is a certain knowing of what is right to do
in any circumstance, which may be only to send a thought of goodwill, of peace
or healing or love out into the world.
So we act, as it were, without acting or, as the verse says, “renouncing
every undertaking,” which means that the personal self is not involved in
wanting a certain outcome, expecting a certain “fruit” of the action. We are truly “untroubled,” which is to be
without fear.
Verse 17 continues the theme, describing the person free
from all conditioning: “He who neither
loveth nor hateht nor grieveth, nor desireth, renouncing good and evil, full of
devotion . . .” What does it mean to be
full of devotion? We may say that the
way of the devotee is not our way, but to be full of devotion means simply that
our whole being is filled with that profound love for humanity of which the
Mahatma spoke when he wrote to A. P. Sinnett (The Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett, Letter 33, chron.): “It is he alone who has the love of humanity
at heart, who is capable of grasping thoroughly the idea of a regenerating
practical Brotherhood who is entitled to the possession of our secrets . . .” And when there is such love, such devotion,
there is no personal self. I am told
that the Sanskrit words that Annie Besant translated as “full of devotion” are para bhakti, that imply a complete
commitment of one’s being to the welfare of all.
That theme is carried forward in verse 18: “Alike to foe and friend, and also in fame
and ignominy, alike in cold and heat, pleasures and pains, destitute of
attachment.” Admittedly, all that is
described here is not easily attained, but what is being portrayed is the
self-realized individual. So we are
brought face to fact with the pairs of opposites that confront many of us every
day and that cloud our perception of what is real, what is important, what is
worth doing. Release from our clouded
condition, caused by the opposites, comes only from becoming free from all
attachments. That emphasis is permanent
and constant throughout the entire Gita.
We must unbind ourselves from what the Buddha called “sticky
attachments.” When we have ceased to be
pulled back and forth between the opposites then the condition described in
verse 19 is present: “Taking equally
praise and reproach, silent, wholly content with what cometh, homeless, firm in
mind, full of devotion,” such indeed, says Krishna to Arjuna in answer to his
question, is the way in which the Self-realized, the “sage of stable
mind,” the true knower of the Wisdom,
acts in the world. Silent, not because
such a person does not speak, though generally he may say little, but because
even when he speaks there is none of the noise of desire, of chattering
thought. Homeless, not because such a
one has no home but because the entire world is his abode. In the beautiful words of The Voice of the Silence, he has “become
a ‘Walker of the Sky’ who treads the winds above the waves, whose step touches
not the waters.” Yes and “wholly content
with what cometh,” filled with that inner contentment that whatever comes to us
is what we have called to ourselves.
Finally, then, in verse 20, Krishna
tells Arjuna, “The verily who partake of this life-giving wisdom [Amrita-Dharma, the truth that is
imperishable, immortal, beautiful, and therefore life-giving] . . . endued with
faith [shraddha, confidence, the
faith that has been called “unlearned knowledge”], I their supreme object . . .
they are surpassingly dear to Me.”
It is evident that the individual pictured in these eight
verses of discourse 12 is one whose qualities and characteristics seem far
beyond achieving. Yet, as all great
scriptures tell us, as Masters of Wisdom—whether called Krishna
or by some other name—have reiterated, “We have but one word for all
aspirants—TRY!” Above all, such an
individual lives in the world, to help the world, acting in the here and now,
and so we must begin here and now, following the guideposts that have been so
beautifully provided for our walking. As
Krishna tells Arjuna in discourse 5 verse
23: “He who is able to endure here on
earth, ere he be liberated from the body, the force born from desire and
passion, he is harmonized, he is a happy man.”
They say that five thousand years and more have passed since
the immortal teaching was given to Arjuna.
If ever the world was in need of the message of the Gita, it is surely
today, when spiritual values have been negated and flouted, when material
craving, greed, prejudice, fear, and hatred seem to stalk the land. But Krishna
promised in verse 7 of discourse 4 that whenever there is “decay of
righteousness,” whenever chaos rules, he
would “come forth,” born from age to age.
We do not know how he will be born, how he may be recognized, in what
race, or faith, or with what voice he will speak. But of this we may be certain:
If we try to live in accordance with the guideposts we have been given,
follow our own unique dharma, work for the welfare of all, his voice will be
heard in our voices, his thoughts will be reflected in our thinking, his
actions revealed in our actions, his presence known in our presence as we seek
to bring light and love and peace into every human heart.
References
Besant, Annie. The Bhagavad Gita. Adyar, Chennai: Theosophical Publishing House, 1999.
Hao Chin, Vincente. The
Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett: In
Chronological Sequence. Adyar,
Chennai: The Theosophical Publishing
House. 1993.
Taimni, I.
K. The Science of Yoga. Wheaton,
IL: Quest Books, 1999.
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