The Bhagavad Gita (Song of the Blessed One)
Of all the great spiritual texts, there’s only one that Gandhi carried with him everywhere. Even though The Bhagavad Gita is not about religion, Gandhi called it his “prayer-book” and its the one he lived his life by. The Gita is a beautiful poem that happens to capture the heart of yoga beautifully. It’s also the one book Guruji and many yoga teachers recommend for aspiring yogis.
Like all poetry, the Gita is best read slowly, from your heart, not your head. Because the setting for the story is a war between two families, it’s often confused with supporting violence. However, the war is simply a metaphor for the war we all fight daily. It’s a reminder that our mind can be both friend and foe and you have to stand up and fight the enemies – jealousy, anger, impatience, doubt – the enemies that prevent our true selves from shining through.
The story is told as a conversation between Arjuna, the warrior representing the good family and Krishna representing the Divine. As Arjuna struggles with having to fight this battle he really doesn’t want to fight, Krishna shares insight on relationship with the Atman (our true self or soul), the Divine and Liberation. He also
references yoga and yogis throughout – and never once mentions asana! The Gita defines a yogi as “the lluminated one”. So… we have to be careful about calling ourselves yogis… most of us aren’t quite there yet, we’re simply “on the path”.
Regardless of what’s going on in your life, the Gita can be your compass, offering direction, comfort and wisdom. One time you be may be called to take action, another time surrendering might seem the better option. It reminds us to take care of the physical body that houses our precious soul ; to fight for our svadharma (our personal path), to love our work and the power we have to make the world better because we bring joy to whatever that “job” is ; and to live life fully but let go of attachment to a specific outcome. even though we may relate this to not caring, it’s really just our mind projecting what we think the fruit of our effort should be. Just being present, giving our best effort and being true to ourselves is enough, the
blessings will come.