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Chapter 6 · Verse 1
🪈 Krishna speaks
Illustration for Chapter 6, Verse 1

अनाश्रितः कर्मफलं कार्यं कर्म करोति यः। स संन्यासी च योगी च न निरग्निर्न चाक्रियः॥

anāśritaḥ karmaphalaṁ kāryaṁ karma karoti yaḥ | sa saṁnyāsī ca yogī ca na niragnirna cākriyaḥ ||

Word by Word 13 words
अनाश्रितः
an not ā towards śri to lean on, to depend on

not leaning on, not depending on

कर्मफलम्
kṛ to do, to act phal to bear fruit

the fruit, the reward of action

कार्यम्
kṛ to do

that which ought to be done, one's duty

कर्म
kṛ to do, to act

action, work

करोति
kṛ to do

does, performs

यः
yad who, which

the one who

सः
tad he, that

he, that person

संन्यासी
sam fully ni down as to cast off

a renunciate, one who has given up selfish action

ca and

and

योगी
yuj to yoke, to join

a yogi, one joined to the Self

na not

not

निरग्निः
nis without agni fire

one who lights no sacred fire

अक्रियः
a not kṛ to do

one who does no work, who sits idle

says: a true renunciate is not the person who simply stops lighting the sacred fire or refuses to do any work at all. The real renunciate, the real yogi, is the one who does the work he ought to do without depending on its reward. Giving up the grabbing for results is what matters, not giving up the doing.

कथा

Two Kings, One Lesson

An original story

The horses stood still in the cold light, and spoke as if he were setting two paintings side by side for to study.

"Let me show you two kings," he said, "so you understand what renunciation truly means. Both believed they had given up the world. Only one of them was free."

leaned forward on the chariot rail.

"The first king grew weary of his crown. So one morning he walked out of his palace, left the throne to whoever wanted it, and went to live in the forest. He wore bark instead of silk. He ate roots. He lit no fire and did no work. 'Now I have given up everything,' he told himself. But sit beside him at dusk, , and you would hear him muttering. 'Is my brother ruining the kingdom? Are the people speaking my name? Did I leave too soon — or too late?' His body sat under a tree, but his mind paced the marble halls he had left behind. He had walked away from the work, yet carried all its worry into the trees. He was a renunciate in costume only."

let that picture settle.

"Now the second king. He kept his crown. Every dawn he sat in the hall of judgement and heard the people's troubles. He led armies when he had to. He collected taxes, mended roads, settled quarrels. His hands were never idle. Yet ask him at night, 'Was today a victory or a defeat?' and he would only smile. 'I did what was mine to do,' he would say. 'The fruit is not in my keeping.' He did not lie awake counting his rewards, because he had never been working for them. He held the kingdom the way you hold water in an open palm — fully, but without clutching."

turned to .

"Tell me — which of the two had really renounced? Not the one who fled the work and kept the worry. The one who kept the work and let go of the worry. That is the renunciate. That is the yogi. Lighting no fire and sitting idle makes no one free. Doing your duty without grasping at its fruit — that is the whole secret."

चिन्तनम्

Have you ever done a chore hoping for a reward, and felt grumpy when none came? What might change if you did it just because it was yours to do?