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PATH
OF
MEDITATION
A
KARMA-YOGI
IS A
RENUNCIANT
Lord
Krishna
said: One
who
performs
the
prescribed
duty
without
seeking
its fruit
for
personal
enjoyment
is a
renunciant
and a
Karma-yogi.
One does
not become
a
renunciant
merely by
not
lighting
the fire,
and one
does not
become a
yogi
merely by
abstaining
from work.
(6.01)
O
Arjuna,
renunciation
(Samnyasa)
is same as
Karma-yoga.
Because,
no one
becomes a
Karma-yogi
who has
not
renounced
the
selfish
motive
behind an
action.
(See also
5.01,
5.05,
6.01, and
18.02)
(6.02)
A
DEFINITION
OF YOGA
For
the wise,
who seeks
to attain
yoga of
meditation,
or the
equanimity
of mind,
Karma-yoga
is said to
be the
means. For
the one
who has
attained
yoga, the
equanimity
becomes
the means
of
Self-realization.
A person
is said to
have
attained
yogic
perfection
when he or
she has no
desire for
sensual
pleasures,
or
attachment
to the
fruits of
work, and
has
renounced
all
personal
selfish
motives.
(6.03-04)
MIND
IS THE
BEST
FRIEND AS
WELL AS
THE WORST
ENEMY
One
must
elevate ¾
and not
degrade ¾
oneself by
one’s
own mind.
The mind
alone is
one’s
friend as
well as
one’s
enemy. The
mind is
the friend
of those
who have
control
over it,
and the
mind acts
like an
enemy for
those who
do not
control
it.
(6.05-06)
One
who has
control
over the
lower self
¾ the
mind and
senses ¾
is
tranquil
in heat
and cold,
in
pleasure
and pain,
and in
honor and
dishonor,
and
remains
ever
steadfast
with the
supreme
Self.
(6.07)
A
person is
called
yogi who
has both
Self-knowledge
and
Self-realization,
who is
equanimous,
who has
control
over the
mind and
senses,
and to
whom a
clod, a
stone, and
gold are
the same.
(6.08)
A
person is
considered
superior
who is
impartial
towards
companions,
friends,
enemies,
neutrals,
arbiters,
haters,
relatives,
saints,
and
sinners.
(6.09)
TECHNIQUES
OF
MEDITATION
A
yogi,
seated in
solitude
and alone,
should
constantly
try to
contemplate
on a
mental
picture or
just the
majesty of
the
Supreme
Being
after
bringing
the mind
and senses
under
control,
and
becoming
free from
desires
and
proprietorship.
(6.10)
One
should sit
on his or
her own
firm seat
that is
neither
too high
nor too
low,
covered
with
grass, a
deerskin,
and a
cloth, one
over the
other, in
a clean
spot.
Sitting
there in a
comfortable
position
and
concentrating
the mind
on God,
controlling
the
thoughts
and the
activities
of the
senses,
one should
practice
meditation
for
self-purification.
(6.11-12)
One
should sit
by holding
the waist,
spine,
chest,
neck, and
head
erect,
motionless
and
steady;
fix the
eyes and
the mind
steadily
on the
front of
the nose,
without
looking
around;
make your
mind
serene and
fearless,
practice
celibacy;
have the
mind under
control,
think of
Me, and
have Me as
the
supreme
goal. (See
also 4.29,
5.27,
8.10, and
8.12)
(6.13-14)
Thus,
by always
practicing
to keep
the mind
fixed on
Me, the
yogi whose
mind is
subdued
attains
peace of
Nirvana
and comes
to Me.
(6.15)
This
yoga is
not
possible,
O Arjuna,
for the
one who
eats too
much, or
who does
not eat at
all; who
sleeps too
much or
too
little.
(6.16)
The
yoga of
meditation
destroys
all sorrow
for the
one who is
moderate
in eating,
recreation,
working,
sleeping,
and
waking.
(6.17)
A
person is
said to
have
achieved
yoga, the
union with
the
Spirit,
when the
perfectly
disciplined
mind
becomes
free from
all
desires,
and gets
completely
united
with the
Spirit in
trance.
(6.18)
A
lamp in a
spot
sheltered
by the
Spirit
from the
wind of
desires
does not
flicker.
This
simile is
used for
the
subdued
mind of a
yogi
practicing
meditation
on the
Spirit.
(6.19)
When
the mind
disciplined
by the
practice
of
meditation
becomes
steady,
one
becomes
content
with the
Spirit by
beholding
the Spirit
of God
with
purified
intellect.
(6.20)
One
feels
infinite
bliss that
is
perceivable
only
through
the
intellect,
and is
beyond the
reach of
the
senses.
After
realizing
the
Absolute
Reality,
one is
never
separated
from it.
(6.21)
After
Self-realization
(SR), one
does not
regard any
other gain
superior
to SR.
Established
in SR, one
is not
moved even
by the
greatest
calamity.
(6.22)
The
state of
severance
of union
with
sorrow is
called
yoga. This
yoga
should be
practiced
with firm
determination,
and
without
any mental
reservation.
(6.23)
One
gradually
attains
tranquillity
of mind by
totally
abandoning
all
selfish
desires,
completely
restraining
the senses
from the
sense
objects by
the
intellect,
and
keeping
the mind
fully
absorbed
in the
Spirit by
means of a
well-trained
and
purified
intellect
and
thinking
of nothing
else.
(6.24-25)
Wheresoever
this
restless
and
unsteady
mind
wanders
away, one
should
(witness
it and)
bring it
under the
watchful
eye
(supervision,
control)
of the
Self.
(6.26)
WHO
IS A YOGI
Supreme
bliss
comes to a
Self-realized
yogi whose
mind is
tranquil,
whose
desires
are under
control,
and who is
free from
faults.
(6.27)
Such
a sinless
yogi, who
constantly
engages
his or her
mind and
intellect
with the
Spirit,
easily
enjoys the
infinite
bliss of
contact
with The
Spirit.
(6.28)
A
yogi, who
is in
union with
the
Supreme
Being,
sees every
being with
an equal
eye
because of
perceiving
the
omnipresent
Spirit
abiding in
all
beings,
and all
beings
abiding in
the
Supreme
Being.
(See also
4.35,
5.18)
(6.29)
Those
who
perceive
Me in
everything,
and behold
everything
in Me, are
not
separated
from Me,
and I am
not
separated
from them.
(6.30)
The
non-dualists,
who adore
Me as
abiding in
all
beings,
abide in
Me
irrespective
of their
mode of
living.
(6.31)
One
is
considered
the best
yogi who
regards
every
being like
oneself,
and who
can feel
the pain
and
pleasures
of others
as one’s
own, O
Arjuna.
(6.32)
TWO
METHODS TO
SUBDUE THE
RESTLESS
MIND
Arjuna
said: O
Krishna,
You have
said that
the yoga
of
meditation
is
characterized
by the
equanimity
of mind,
but due to
restlessness
of mind I
do not
perceive
the steady
state of
mind.
Because
the mind,
indeed, is
very
unsteady,
turbulent,
powerful,
and
obstinate,
O Krishna.
I think
restraining
the mind
is as
difficult
as
restraining
the wind.
(6.33-34)
Lord
Krishna
said:
Undoubtedly,
O Arjuna,
the mind
is
restless
and
difficult
to
restrain,
but it is
subdued by
any
constant
vigorous
spiritual
practice
¾ such as
meditation
¾ with
perseverance,
and by
detachment,
O Arjuna.
(6.35)
In
My
opinion,
yoga is
difficult
for the
one whose
mind is
not
subdued.
However,
yoga is
attainable
by the
person of
subdued
mind by
striving
through
proper
means.
(6.36)
DESTINATION
OF
UNSUCCESSFUL
YOGI
Arjuna
said: The
faithful
who
deviates
from the
path of
meditation
and fails
to attain
yogic
perfection
due to
unsubdued
mind —
what is
the
destination
of such a
person, O
Krishna?
(6.37)
Do
they not
perish
like a
dispersing
cloud, O
Krishna,
having
lost both
the
heavenly
and the
worldly
pleasures,
supportless
and
bewildered
on the
path of
Self-realization?
(6.38)
O
Krishna,
only You
are able
to
completely
dispel
this doubt
of mine.
Because
there is
none,
other than
You, who
can dispel
this
doubt.
(See also
15.15)
(6.39)
Lord
Krishna
said:
There is
no
destruction,
O Arjuna,
for a yogi
either
here or
hereafter.
A
transcendentalist
is never
put to
grief, My
dear
friend.
(6.40)
The
less
evolved
unsuccessful
yogi is
reborn in
the house
of the
pious and
prosperous
after
attaining
heaven and
living
there for
many
years. The
highly
evolved
unsuccessful
yogi does
not go to
heaven,
but is
born in a
spiritually
advanced
family. A
birth like
this is
very
difficult,
indeed, to
obtain in
this
world.
(6.41-42)
There
he or she
regains
the
knowledge
acquired
in the
previous
life, and
strives
again to
achieve
perfection,
O Arjuna.
(6.43)
The
unsuccessful
yogi is
instinctively
carried
towards
God by
virtue of
the
impressions
of yogic
practices
of
previous
lives.
Even the
inquirer
of yoga ¾
the union
with God
¾
surpasses
those who
perform
Vedic
rituals.
(6.44)
The
yogi, who
diligently
strives,
becomes
completely
free from
all
imperfections
after
gradually
perfecting
through
many
incarnations,
and
reaches
the
Supreme
Abode.
(6.45)
WHO
IS THE
BEST YOGI
The
yogi, who
is devoted
to
meditation,
is
superior
to the
ascetics.
The yogi
is
superior
to the
Vedic
scholars.
The yogi
is
superior
to the
ritualists.
Therefore,
O Arjuna,
be a yogi.
(6.46)
And
I consider
the
yogi-devotee
¾ who
lovingly
contemplates
on Me with
supreme
faith, and
whose mind
is ever
absorbed
in Me ¾
to be the
best of
all the
yogis.
(See also
12.02 and
18.66)
(6.47)
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