The sixty-sixth in a series of talks by Swami Nirmalananda Giri (Abbot George Burke) on the Bhagavad Gita, India’s most famous scripture: the unforgettable dialog between Sri Krishna and Arjuna about the essence of spiritual life.
In this talk, starting with Chapter 14:06, Swamiji continues Krishna’s talk on the three gunas: sattwa, rajas, & tamas. He discusses the signs of each guna’s presence and dominance, as well as the attachments caused by each guna.
Here are the Gita verses (14:06–14:20) covered in this talk:
Sattwa is stainless, luminous,
And free from defect, yet it binds
By attachment to happiness
And by attachment to knowledge. (6)
Know rajas’ nature is passion,
Producing thirst and attachment;
It binds fast the embodied one
By the attachment to action. (7)
Tamas is born of ignorance,
Stupefying the embodied;
It binds by miscomprehension,
Indolence, and sleep, Bharata. (8)
Sattwa ’ttaches to happiness,
Rajas to action, Bharata;
And Tamas, obscuring knowledge,
Attaches unto delusion. (9)
Sattwa prevails over rajas
And tamas; and rajas prevails
Over sattwa and tamas; and
Tamas over sattwa, rajas. (10)
When through each sense of the body
The light of knowledge clearly shines,
Then it should be known that sattwa
Is there fully predominant. (11)
Activity, undertaking
Of actions, greed, unrest, longing–
When rajas is predominant
All these arise, O Bharata. (12)
Darkness, inertness, heedlessness,
And delusion–all these arise
When tamas is predominant,
O descendant of the Kurus. (13)
If the embodied one meets death
When sattwa is predominant,
Then he attains the stainless realms
Of the knowers of the Highest. (14)
Meeting death in rajas, he’s born
Amid those attached to action;
Dying in tamas, he is born
From the wombs of the deluded. (15)
The fruit of good action, they say,
Is sattwic and pure; verily,
The fruit of rajas is pain, and
Ignorance the fruit of tamas. (16)
From sattwa arises wisdom;
From rajas, greed; while from tamas
Arises miscomprehension,
And delusion and ignorance. (17)
The sattwa ’biding go upwards;
Rajasics dwell in the middle;
Tamasics, abiding in the
Lowest guna, do go downward. (18)
When the seer beholds no agent
Other than the gunas and knows
That which is higher than gunas,
He attains unto My being. (19)
He who goes beyond these gunas
Which are the source of the body,
Is freed from birth, death, disease, pain,
And attains immortality. (20)
Here’s a summary of Swamiji’s talk on Brahma’s Day & Night:
In this 66th talk on the Bhagavad Gita, Swami Nirmalananda Giri continues exploring Chapter 14, “The Yoga of the Division of the Three Gunas,” delving deeper into Sattva (goodness), Rajas (passion), and Tamas (ignorance).
He challenges the traditional phrasing that these gunas arise from Prakriti (nature), suggesting instead that they give rise to specific states of mind and behavior.
Sattva fosters happiness and knowledge, Rajas drives action and desire, and Tamas veils knowledge with delusion.
The talk emphasizes the dynamic interplay and equal potential dominance of the gunas, illustrating how one’s choices in thought, action, and company determine which guna prevails. Ultimately, liberation comes from transcending all three gunas to realize the eternal self beyond Prakriti, supported by practical examples and personal reflections.
Main Points:
- Reinterpretation of the Gunas:
- The three gunas—Sattva, Rajas, and Tamas—are modes of energy and consciousness, not merely arising from Prakriti but shaping mental and behavioral states.
- Swami suggests rephrasing: Sattva causes luminous happiness, Rajas causes intense desire and action, and Tamas causes ignorance and delusion, rather than these states arising from the gunas.
- Sattva: Luminosity and Attachment:
- Sattva is stainless, luminous, and health-giving, promoting ease, harmony, and mental clarity, yet it binds through attachment to happiness and knowledge.
- It can dominate Rajas and Tamas, offering a path to higher awareness if cultivated intentionally.
- Rajas: Action and Restlessness:
- Rajas manifests as intense desire and attachment to action, seen in restless individuals who can’t sit still or tolerate silence.
- It binds through compulsive doing and can override Sattva or Tamas, pulling one back into the cycle of worldly activity.
- Tamas: Delusion and Inertia:
- Tamas veils knowledge, fostering mental blindness, delusion, and attachment to false perceptions (e.g., fake gurus and disciples thriving in ignorance).
- It can dominate the other gunas, keeping people asleep to reality, as exemplified by the indignant caller misinterpreting a karma discussion.
- Equal Power of the Gunas:
- No guna is inherently subordinate; each can prevail over the others depending on one’s thoughts, actions, environment, and associations.
- This fluidity means individuals choose which guna dominates, with Sattva requiring conscious effort (e.g., meditation) to prevail.
- Signs of Dominance:
- Sattva’s dominance shines knowledge through all senses, with no blind spots; Rajas shows in compulsive action and restlessness; Tamas in darkness, inertia, and misinterpretation (e.g., addicts seeing drugs as helpful).
- Personal anecdotes (e.g., people studying shoelaces to avoid spiritual talk) highlight resistance to Sattva’s influence.
- Consequences at Death:
- Dying with Sattva dominant leads to stainless realms of knowers who avoid rebirth; Rajas dominant leads to rebirth among action-driven beings; Tamas dominant results in birth among the deluded or stagnant.
- Examples include small-town inertia and families opposing education, reflecting Tamas’s grip.
- Fruit of the Gunas:
- Virtue in Sattva yields faultless, uplifting karma; Rajas produces pain, anxiety, and unease (e.g., the miserable producer “Joe”); Tamas yields ignorance and bewilderment.
- These outcomes stem from choices, not inherent superiority of one guna.
- Transcending the Gunas:
- True liberation comes when one sees no doer beyond the gunas and recognizes the self as beyond Prakriti, attaining the divine consciousness (Krishna’s being).
- This state, free from birth, death, and pain, is eternal and manifest through rising above the gunas via meditation and awareness.
- Personal Journey and Environment:
- Swamiji recounts escaping a Tamas-dominated environment (family, town) for California and India, where Sattva thrived among yogis and metaphysicians.
- Company outweighs willpower (per Yogananda), urging one to seek Sattvic associations, diet, and meditation to rise upward.
This talk blends scriptural analysis with practical insights, urging listeners to cultivate Sattva through conscious living while aiming to transcend all gunas for ultimate freedom.