Krishna gathered the reins of the white horses, who had grown restless in
the dark, tossing their heads and stamping.
"A person," he said, "is a little like a chariot. The body is the cart. The
mind is the driver. And the senses — hearing, sight, touch, taste, smell —
are five horses, eager and strong, each pulling toward whatever it loves."
Arjuna watched the horses settle as Krishna's hands steadied the reins.
"The ear gallops toward sweet sounds. The eye bolts after bright sights. The
tongue strains toward sweet tastes. If the driver drops the reins, the five
horses scatter in five directions and tear the chariot apart. You have seen
it happen — a person ruined by chasing every pleasure their senses cried for."
"So what does a wise driver do?" Arjuna asked.
"There are two ways, and both are a kind of offering. The first seeker takes
the horses themselves — the very senses — and gives them up into the fire of
self-restraint. That means he trains them. He keeps a gentle, firm grip, so
the ear does not drag him toward gossip, nor the eye toward what is not his.
The horses still run, but they run where he chooses. He has offered their
wildness into the flame of his own steady will."
The horses had gone quiet now, ears forward, waiting.
"The second seeker does something subtler. He lets the sounds and sights come
— he does not block his ears or shut his eyes — but he offers each one into
the fire of his senses without being burned by it. A beautiful song reaches
him and passes through; he enjoys it and lets it go, the way a clear window
lets light pass without holding on to it. The pleasant thing comes, brightens
the moment, and moves on, leaving no hook in his heart."
Arjuna nodded slowly. "One tames the horses. The other lets the road go by
without grabbing at it."
"Just so," said Krishna. "Both keep the chariot whole. Both are masters, not
servants, of the senses. And a master may travel anywhere — even into pleasure
— without losing the way."
He flicked the reins, and the horses, calm now, stood ready for whatever the
morning would ask.