Bhagavad Gita Teaches Samata
Bhagavad Gita Teaches Samata
Bhagavad Gita Teaches Samata
The key message of all the Yogas (Bhakti, Karma, Dhayaan, and Gyaan) taught in the BG is to
be established in samata, i.e., equanimity. The greatest hint about this master key is provided in
¼ of a shaloka: Vasudevah sarvam iti (BG 7.19)—Vasudeva is all there is!
(The Vedas (karam-kaanda portions) deal with the triad of gunas. Be, O Arjuna, free from the
triad of the gunas, free from the pairs of duality, free from acquisition and preservation, ever
remaining established in the quality of sattva, and centered in the Self.)
The best guidance for this stance is provided in the BG verses 3.27, 3.28, 5.8-9, 5.1, 7.14, 13.21,
13.29, 15.19, 18.49, 18.50. Imbibing the true essence of these verses enables us to carry out our
actions without any attachment or aversion—raag-dvesh—to the actions themselves, to their
actor, and to their results.
To be established in this samata is called real yoga: Samatvam yogah ucyate. The complete verse
is as follows:
[By being steadfast in Yoga, O Dhananjya (Arjuna), perform all your actions, casting off
attachment, remaining equanimous in success and failure. Equanimity is called Yoga].
Sri Shankracharya‟s comment on this verse: „What is that yoga established in which one should
perform actions? This only: remaining equanimous in success and failure. This (evenness of
mind) is what is called yoga.‟
Then finally the most important verse in the entire Gita (2.16) tells us this: na ‘stoh vidhatey
bhavo, na ‘bhavo vidhatey sattah: The unreal never is and the Real never ceases to be. Combine
this verse with Vasudevah sarvam iti, and you will have the greatest recipe for samata. When
this occurs one sees oneness everywhere, in everyone, and in everything—Vasudevah sarvam iti.
The opening verse of Isa Upanishad also says the same thing: ‘Isa vasyam idam sarvam…tena
tyaktena bhunjjhitha—All that there is, is pervaded by the Lord…Renouncing (the false sense of
ownership/doership) thus, verily rejoice.‟ This is the greatest blessing, the end of all sorrows.
After all, „To him who sees unity, what delusion is there, what grief?‟ (Isa Upanisad, 7): tatra ko
mohah kah shokah ekatvam anupashatah. If one‟s mano vritti—deep understanding— is that
Vasudevah is all there is and that the Real never ceases to be, what is there then to worry about.
This can only happen when, with God‟s grace, one gets established in Parabrahmm
Paramatama—Vasudevah sarvam—since Brahman alone is the ever-Immutable, ever-
homogenous, and ever-Equanimous basis (sarva-adhishthaan) of all (BG 5. 19).
[Resting in Brahman, with mind steady and without delusion, the knower of Brahman neither
rejoices in receiving what is pleasant nor grieves on receiving what is unpleasant.]
This is the real meaning of the verse „yogah karmasu kaushlam’ (BG 2.50). The common
translation of this important verse is: “Yoga is skillfulness in action.” If we take this to be the
true import of this verse, we then run into a great difficulty in explaining such instances: „The
actions of a thief who is skillful in the art of theft or a sniper who is skillful in the art of killing,
will their actions qualify to be called yoga?‟ Obviously, the Radiant One meant something more
profound. Swami Ramsukh Das ji says that this verse—yogah karmasu kaushalam—does not
present the definition of yoga; instead, it denotes the importance of yoga. He adds that we
should rather translate this verse as follows: Samata in actions is verily the skillfulness in
actions. This interpretation is in keeping with the context where this verse occurs in the BG, i.e.,
in that section of chapter 2 (verses 38-53). Also, this fully reconciles with Sri Sankara‟s
commentary on this verse. Says Sankara: “Skillfulness means the wisdom of equanimity with
regards to one‟s success and failure while engaged in actions—called one‟s own duties (sva-
dharma)—with the mind dedicated to God.” (Gambhirananda, 1984, p. 96). And this is exactly
how Sri Sankara interpreted verse 2.48 that defines yoga in terms of samatav.
In sum, the skillfulness in actions lies in the wisdom of equanimity, dedicating them all to
Vasudevah, which is all there is. The whole art and science of Karma Yoga lies in just this
understanding. And this samatav-sthitti is also the sahaj avasthaa of all saints and sages, the
epitome of all spiritual realization. Sarva Mangal Managalam!