“The Lord of Sri said, ‘One who does his duties properly and
renounces the fruit of his action is both a renunciate and a yogi. It is not
possible to become a sanyasi merely by forgoing work and sacrificial fire. O
Son of Pandu! Sanyasa is yoga, because only by giving up all selfish impulses
can one attain yoga. For someone who has just begun yoga, accomplishment of
yoga can be attained by action. But for those who have already attained yoga,
perfection is possible through termination of all activity. When all attachment
towards sense objects and action cease, all material impulses stop, one attains
yoga. Whether one attains elevation or degradation through one’s mind is up to
oneself, for the mind can be one’s friend or one’s foe.”
When he says, “One who does his duties properly and
renounces the fruit of action is both a renunciate and a yogi. It is not
possible to become a sanyasi merely by forgoing work and sacrificial fire,” it
means that it is not the action which is entangling. To give an example – let’s
say you are an accountant. Going to the office, counting numbers, coming home
does not entangle you. But you are going to the office because it gives you a
certain prestige, access, and other benefits. You are going to the office not
because you love to count numbers but for the fruit of action. He is trying to
take that away from you. If you do not get any salary, no prestige, no social
access, no benefits of any kind – would you still be willing to work? It is not
that you should not eat or enjoy what is around you, but if those things were
not there, would you still work with the same intensity? That is what is of
utmost value and significance here.
It is never what you do which entangles you. It is the
expectation of what you should get which entangles you.
The volunteers here who are cooking in the kitchen,
arranging all these flowers, doing all this work, are not getting a prize. They
are not getting paid; they do not even get to sit in the hall. But do you think
they do anything with resentment, like “I do not get to participate in the
Leela, so why the hell should I do all this”? There is none. They are simply
doing it. This is renouncing the fruit of action. Enormous effort is being
made, without expecting the fruit of action. Often, there is not even a word of
acknowledgement from me, because I do not want them to get entangled with that
either.
Once you renounce the fruit of action, action will come
easily. Once someone simply does it for the love of what they are doing, and
above all because they want someone else to enjoy it, it does not matter
whether they get to sit there too or not. Once you renounce the fruit of
action, action is not entangling. It is never what you do which entangles you.
It is the expectation of what you should get which entangles you. Just observe
yourself – wherever you do action without expectation, what is your experience?
Wherever you do action with expectation, what is your experience? If you look
at that, you will speak Gita.
Since you will not drop the fruit of action out of
awareness, there is so much talk about love. When you have a deep sense of love
for someone, it is easier to drop the fruit of action. In this sense, generally
everywhere in the world and especially in this culture, women are better karma
yogis than men. Being a housewife with husband and children is a full-time job.
If they cook, whether they themselves eat or not, they want the child and the
husband to eat. Everything they do is done without expecting any fruit of
action. Somehow, they have a different quality about themselves, a certain
sense of peace and life. In this generation, it is dissipating because they are
getting educated, and unfortunately, the way education is structured right now,
it creates endless want.
Once you are educated, there is no question of sitting and
relaxing. You must be “on” endlessly. Modern education has brought this madness
in progress. During the 60’s, one of the hippies slogans was “Even if you win
the rat race, you’re still a rat.” Do you want to be one? The hippie movement’s
intention was right – longing to break away, longing to know another dimension
of life – but unfortunately, it happened without guidance. Some opportunistic
people misused this, and the whole thing floundered. People used drugs, killed
themselves, got drunk and only hastened their destruction rather than getting
anywhere. Some people got their lives straightened out, others got washed away.
Absolute inaction is samadhi.
Becoming free from the fruit of action is a complete
release. Action is never a suffering. It is expecting the fruit of action which
causes suffering. If you did not expect anything, you would work joyfully, and
with tremendous ability, because what comes in the end is not the point. If you
enjoyed doing something, you would simply throw yourself absolutely into it.
That is the culture we want to create.
“O Son of Pandu! Sanyasa is yoga, because only by giving up
all selfish impulses can one attain yoga.” This is the same thing said in a
different way. He clarifies here that sanyasa does not mean not doing anything.
It just means you have given up selfish impulses – “selfish” not in social
terms but in the sense of being too concerned about the fruit of action. No
matter if it is not for you but for other people – your family, your community
or whoever – you should do all this without any great expectation of the fruit.
If you get a fruit, eat it – there is nothing wrong with that. It is not the
fruit that kills you. It is the expectation of the fruit of action that kills
you.
“For someone who has just begun yoga, accomplishment of yoga
can be attained by action. But for one who has already attained yoga,
perfection is possible through termination of all activity.”
Many people ask me, “Shall I just come to the ashram?” Their
idea is to drop all the action that they have been doing in their lives – their
responsibilities, their family, their work, their business – and come here to
just meditate. No – even here, we put people to action, because the part of
their prarabdha that is dedicated to action is not yet exhausted. Prarabdha is
an allotted amount of karma. Certain amounts of your life energy are dedicated
to different aspects, including action, thoughts, and emotions. You have to either
expend or transcend the energy dedicated to action. The simplest way is to
expend it. If you work more, the energy allotted for action is expended sooner.
Unless you expend the allotted energy, you cannot sit still.
If you want to sit here without any movement within you, without a single
thought or emotion or anything else, simply like empty space, you have to work
to expend that energy. Otherwise, you must do the necessary sadhana to
transform this energy into something else, which is much subtler and takes a
deeper level of sadhana. Expending energy through excessive action is good in
the earlier phase of sadhana. That is why he says, “For someone who has just
begun yoga, accomplishment of yoga can be attained by action.” Here, he does
not mean accomplishment in the sense of ultimate accomplishment.
The next sentence is: “But for one who has already attained
yoga, perfection is possible through termination of all activity.” Once you
have expended your prarabdha karma, which means the energy allotted for action
is used up, you terminate all activity and attain perfection. One level of
human consciousness or experience is referred to as yoga – another level is
translated as “perfection.” Do we have the original Sanskrit? Chapter Six,
Verse Three.
Participant: Yogarudhasya tasyaiva shamah karanam ucchyate
The English translation may not be accurate.
Anyway – for a beginner, action is good. First you have to bring yourself to
the point where you transcend the basic force of physical existence – the
karmic bondage or prarabdha. When all attachment to sense objects and actions
cease and all material impulses stop, one attains yoga. Instead of talking
about the mind, he talks about the senses. Both are connected – the five senses
are the mouths of the mind. Without the five senses, the mind has no feed. If
the sense organs do not take in anything, the mind has no food to go on with.
Absolute inaction is samadhi. In samadhi, you drop both
external and internal activity – even the physiological activity drops.
Termination of activity is not only about outer activity but also inner
activity – thoughts, emotions, bodily functions – everything is still.
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