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Chapter 2 · Verse 61
🪈 Krishna speaks
Gond-style painting of an ancient warrior sitting perfectly still with all senses restrained, focused on the supreme goal — illustrating the discipline of steady wisdom.

तानि सर्वाणि संयम्य युक्त आसीत मत्परः। वशे हि यस्येन्द्रियाणि तस्य प्रज्ञा प्रतिष्ठिता॥

tāni sarvāṇi saṁyamya yukta āsīta matparaḥ | vaśe hi yasyendriyāṇi tasya prajñā pratiṣṭhitā ||

Word by Word 13 words
तानि
tad that, those

those, them

सर्वाणि
sarva all, every

all, every

संयम्य
sam together yam to restrain, to control

having restrained, having brought under control

युक्तः
yuj to yoke, to join, to unite

disciplined, focused, united

आसीत
ās to sit, to be seated

should sit, should remain established

मत्परः
mat Me, the Supreme para highest goal

devoted to Me as the highest, with Me as the supreme aim

वशे
vaś to be under control, to wish

under control, in one's power

हि
hi indeed, for

indeed, for

यस्य
yad who, whose

of whom, whose

इन्द्रियाणि
indriya sense organ, from indra — lord

the senses

तस्य
tad that, his

of that one, his

प्रज्ञा
pra forth jñā to know

wisdom, deep understanding

प्रतिष्ठिता
prati firmly sthā to stand

established, firmly grounded

Having restrained all the senses, one should sit focused with Me as the supreme goal. One whose senses are under control — that one's wisdom is steady.

कथा

The Warrior Who Sat Still

An original story

Before the battle of , there was another battle — smaller, forgotten by most, remembered only in the songs of traveling bards who passed through the western provinces.

A young named Vibhanu had been given command of a frontier garrison. Raiders from the northern hills had been attacking villages for months, burning granaries, stealing cattle, vanishing into the mountain passes before anyone could respond. Vibhanu had three hundred soldiers. The raiders had twice that number and knew the terrain like the lines on their own palms.

On the night before the engagement, Vibhanu's tent was full of noise. His officers argued over strategy. Scouts brought conflicting reports — the raiders were here, no they were there, no they had split into three groups. A horse had gone lame. The supply wagon had lost a wheel. One of his best archers had come down with fever and was shaking under two blankets in the medical tent.

Vibhanu listened to everything. Then he did something that confused his officers profoundly.

He walked out of the tent, sat on the bare ground, crossed his legs, and closed his eyes.

"Sir," his lieutenant said, "the scouts need orders."

"In a moment."

"Sir, the western flank has no —"

"In a moment."

The camp went on churning around him — men sharpening swords, horses snorting, cooking fires hissing in the drizzle. But Vibhanu sat as though he were the only person in the world. His breathing slowed. His hands rested on his knees, palms up, fingers loose. His face, which had been tight with calculation, gradually softened.

He was not ignoring the battle. He was gathering himself. Every scattered piece of his attention — the fear, the excitement, the plans, the doubts — he drew inward, the way a tortoise draws its limbs, the way a musician tunes each string before the concert begins. He was not running away from the noise. He was sitting in its exact center, but he was sitting with something larger than the noise — a stillness that did not depend on silence.

When he opened his eyes ten minutes later, his officers saw something different in his face. Not peace exactly, but clarity. He gave his orders — short, precise, each one landing like an arrow in the center of a target. The scouts moved. The flanks formed. The archers found their positions.

They won the engagement before dawn.

Vibhanu did not win because he sat still. He won because sitting still made everything else clear. When the senses are gathered and the mind is aimed at something higher than its own churning, wisdom does not need to be chased. It arrives, the way daylight arrives — not because you called it, but because you stopped blocking it.

चिन्तनम्

Before something important — a test, a performance, a difficult conversation — do you take a moment to become still first? What happens when you do?