GEMS FROM THE OCEAN OF
HINDU THOUGHT VISION AND PRACTICE
BEACH 11: LIVE HAPPILY, THE
(Other Beaches: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10)
Wave 11: ACTIONLESSNESS
[ OTHER WAVES ON THE SAME BEACH: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 12 ]
In His final winding up, in the 18th chapter,
shreyAn
svadharmo viguNaH para-dharmAt svanushhTitAt /
svabhAva-niyataM karma
kurvan-nA-pnoti kilbishhaM // XVIII – 47
sahajam karma
kaunteya sadoshham-api na tyajet /
sarvArambhA hi
doshheNa dhUmen-Agni-rivA-vRtaM // XVIII – 48
Better is one’s own work, though done with fault, than doing other’s
work, even excellently. By doing the task set on one by Nature’s hand one does
not fall in sin. No one shall abandon his natural duty, though blameful; for
every work has blame, just as every flame is wrapped in smoke.
It is precisely this train of argument
that is used as the core argument in urging Arjuna to fight and not to retreat.
Arjuna is immersed in the disease of false identification with the transient
world of 'his' kith and kin, says
If, instead of allowing one’s mind to submit to the normal error that
the jIva always makes, namely that of identification with the BMI, if one uses
one’s intellect to deliberately remove that identification of the jIva with the
BMI, then one is on the right road to spiritual ascent. For, In
the akshhara
(Imperishable) He is untouched, indifferent, regarding all equally, extended
within all, yet above all. In all
these, He is the Lord, the Supreme IShvara in the highest, the
presiding and all-pervading impersonality. While being the immanent Will and
present active Lord in the kshhara, He is free in the impersonality even
while working out the play of his personality. That is why He is able to say:
Actions do not fix themselves on me, nor have I any desire for the fruits of action (IV-14 first
line).
na mAm karmANi
limpanti na me karma-phale spRhA /
Works do not bind me, for I am seated as if indifferent, unattached to these
actions. (IX - 9)..
na ca mAM tAni
karmANi nibadhnanti dhananjaya
/
udAsInavad-AsInaM asaktaM
teshhu karmasu //
Therefore He declares: Whoever sees that all action is verily done by prakRti and that the Self is actionless, he sees. (XIII - 29).
prakRtyaiva ca
karmANi kriyamANAni sarvashaH /
yaH
pashyati tathA-tmAnaM akartAraM sa pashyati //
Thus the Self is actionless. This is what is called Actionlessness. This is a very important concept in the
advaitic interpretation of the Gita. It is not just a description in terms of the Lord but it is,
in the Gita, a goal (naishhkarmya-siddhi: perfection of
actionlessness -- shloka XVIII-49)) to
be aimed at by a spiritual aspirant. That is how it becomes important
for us. Though the actual word ‘naishhkarmya’ (actionlessness) occurs only two
times in the Gita, He
refers to the concept very often during the whole teaching. It is in fact the crowning glory of Karma
yoga. Let us come to it from the beginning.
In the very beginning of the Lord’s teaching, right in the second
chapter (shloka 19)
Ya enaM
vetti hantAraM yashcainaM manyate hataM /
ubhau tau na
vijAnIto nAyaM hanti na hanyate //
Whoever thinks of this (the Atman) as the slayer and whoever considers this as slain,
both of them do not know; Neither does this slay nor is slain.
Of course one might say that this is a statement about the inactive
Atman and therefore is understandable.
It is interesting to note that
the same thing is being said in XVIII-17, though in an extremely forceful and
aggressive way:
Yasya
nAhamkRto bhAvo buddhir-yasya na lipyate /
hatvApi sa imAn
lokAn na hanti na nibadhyate //
Whoever has the ‘I-am-not-the-doer’ attitude, whoever has his intellect
unswayed (by anything that is transient), he, even after slaying the entire
world, is neither the slayer nor is bound (by the action.)
The only change between II-19 and XVIII-17 is that the latter talks of the person (who has the ‘I-am-not-the-doer’
feeling) and not of The Atman! But our
human weakness is such that we are able to intellectually understand II-19,
whereas when it comes to XVIII-17, we seem to have reservations. The whole
purpose of the Gita is to bring home the point that the person who has no ‘I-am-the-doer’ feeling is nothing
but the akshara-purushha
or the Atman.
The whole Gita is actually the passage from the Actionlessness of
theAtman (II-19) to the enlightened attitude of actionlessness of the individual
(XVIII-17). It is this change in attitude that restores
to the individual the
Happiness within. Throughout his talk
To begin with, actionlessness is not non-action.
na
karmaNAm-anArambhAt naishkarmyam purushho’shnute /
Actionlessness is not achieved by not entering into action.
In fact this is the first time the word is used by
na me pArthAsti
kartavyaM trishhu lokeshhu kimcana /
nAnavAptam-avAptavyaM varta eva ca karmaNi //
I have nothing to get done in all the three worlds, nor anything to achieve
that has not been achieved. Still I am involved in action.
It is when he later
talks of the creation of the
cAturvarNyaM mayA
sRshhTaM guNa-karma-vibhAgashaH /
tasya
kartAram-api mAM viddhy-akartAram-avyayaM //
By Me was created the four varNas,
in accordance with their GuNas and karma. Know Me
as its doer and know Me also as the imperishable non-doer.
He repeats this again in respect of His works of Creation and
Dissolution, in the ninth chapter. (IX-9)
na ca mAM tAni
karmANi nibadhnanti dhananjaya /
udAsInavad-AsInaM asaktaM
teshhu karmasu //
Those works do not bind Me. I sit, indifferent
as it were, unattached to those actions.
So after the first mention of His actionlessness in the fourth chapter,
he recommends it to Arjuna also (“kuru karmaiva tasmAt-tvaM” IV-15). It is at this
point that He begins the topic of Action and Inaction. And He begins it with a
bang by making a really puzzling profound statement that must be imprinted in
gold:
karmaNy-akarma yaH
pashyet akarmaNi ca karma yaH /
sa
buddhimAn-manushhyeshhu sa yuktaH kRtsna-karma-kRt // IV-18
Whoever sees inaction in action and action in inaction, he is the wisest
among men for he is the one in proper yoga and is the performer of all actions.
Inaction in action: When a train moves the landscape moves in the opposite
direction. But really there is no movement of the landscape. Only children will
delude themselves into believing that the landscape is moving. We would be only
children if we believe the movement of the landscape. So also the akshhara-purushha
or the Atman
has no action. In other words, the real ‘I’ is not the doer. When I do things I
must know that the real ‘I’ is not doing anything. This is the seeing of
inaction in action. karmaNi akarma. The action is only apparent. Inaction is real.
The wise man knows that the world which one sees to be full of action is
actually nothing but brahman, and as the all-pervading entity it cannot
have motion, because there is no leeway for movement!.
So he sees non-action in all the turmoil around him.
Action in inaction: When
the train moves, the landscape moves in the opposite direction. The child
thinks that it is the landscape that is moving and the train is stationary.
Even we adults get this mistaken feeling when two trains are in adjacent
platforms ready to move in opposite directions. Suddenly we feel that the other
train has already moved, but on examination of the changing landscape between the two trains we
understand that it is our train that has started moving and not the other
train. This is the understanding of action in apparent inaction. To attribute non-action to the Self which
stands still as it were is only to comprehend it relatively. It is the Self which
permeates everyhere, it is the substratum of everything and it is the prime
mover par excellence. The Self is therefore the chief agent of action, as it
were, though it appears to be only a silent witness. Thus the wise man sees
action in non-action.
Yasya
sarve samArambhAH kAma-sankalpa-varjitAH /
jnAnAgni-dagdha-karmANaM tam-AhuH paNDitam budhAH // IV-19
The wise consider him as the learned one, who has all his actions
extinguished by the fire of JnAna and all whose endeavours are devoid of desire
or will.
The fire of JnAna is the attitude of Actionlessness. So there is no
desire to obtain anything nor there is a will (ego) to claim the action as one’s doing.
tyaktvA
karma-phalAsangaM nitya-tRpto nirAshrayaH /
karmaNy-abhipravRtto’pi naiva kimcit-karoti saH // IV – 20
Having abandoned the attachment to the fruits of actions ever content
and not having any ephemeral prop, even though he is involved in activities, he
is actually not doing anything.
nirAshIr-yata-cittAtmA tyakta-sarva-parigrahaH /
shArIraM kevalaM
karma kurvan-nApnoti kilbishhaM // IV-21
He who has no desires to be fulfilled, who has controlled his BMI, who
has abandoned all possessive ideas and does work only by his body, incurs no
sin.
This is the recipe for ‘How to act’ if one is
after happiness. It is explained further in the next shloka:
yaDrcchA-lAbha-santushhTo dvandvAtIto vimatsaraH /
samas-siddhAv-asiddhau ca kRtvApi na nibadhyate // IV – 22
Just content with what one gets in the normal course of things,
transcending all pairs of opposites, and without envy and with an equanimous
view of both success and failure, though acting, one is not bound.
sarvaM
karmAkhilaM pArtha jnAne parisamApyate //(IV-33 -2nd
line)
All actions of all kinds culminate in JnAna.
Because, JnAna implies actionlessness. And for the same reason, the following
shloka also makes sense:
api ced-asi
pApebhyaH sarvebhyaH pApa-kRt-tamaH /
sarvaM jnAna-plaven-aiva
vRjinaM santarishhyasi // IV-36
Even if you are the most sinful of all sinners, you will cross sin by the raft
of JnAna (through the attitude of ationlessness).
Yathai-dhAmsi
samiddhogniH bhasmasAt-kurte’rjuna /
jnAnAgnis-sarva-karmANi bhasmasAt-kurute tathA //IV – 37
As the blazing fire reduces fuel to ashes so does the fire of JnAna
reduce all actions to ashes.
‘All actions’ (sarva-karmANi) here should be meant to include all
three kinds of karma – prArabdha, samcita and AgAmi.
AgAmi karma
is consumed because, after the onset of JnAna, there is no more desire. So all
action done is desireless and one will not be bound by the results of such
action. It is like a dried seed that will not sprout.
Sancita
karma on the other hand is the stored reservoir of past actions in
all lives, up to the present time (except the prArabdha
portion which has already started to give its fruits in this life). All these
actions no more bear fruit because the onset of JnAna is nothing but an oneness
with the akshhara-purushha.
Nothing will affect this akshhara.
Now we come to the prArabdha-karma. It is the set of all past actions
which have already begun to bear fruit. It is because of that we are still
alive. These fruits (of past actions) have to be exhausted only by experiencing
them. But the experience is by the kshhara-purushha only. Since at the onset of jnAna
one is identical with the akshhara-purushha (the kshhara-purushha has no separate
individuality now), the experience of prArabdha-karma boils down to an experience by the
BMI and nothing more. In that sense, they may also be said to have been
consumed by the fire of JnAna!
Yoga-sannyasta-karmANaM
jnAna-samcinna-samshayaM /
AtmavantaM
na karmANi nibadhnanti dhananjaya //IV -41
Actions do not bind him who has laid all his actions at the altar of
yoga (by the yajna methodology), whose doubts have all been cleared by right
knowledge and who lives ever in unison with the akshhara-purushha.
Yogayukto
vishuddh-AtmA vijitAtmA jitendriyaH /
sarva-bhUtAtma-bhUtAtmA kurvan-napi na lipyate //V – 7
He who is yoked to the path of yoga, whose mind is quite pure, who has
controlled his outer self and his senses and who realises his own self as the
self in all beings – such a one, though acting, is not tainted (by the action).
How he would act is described dramatically in slow motion in the next
four shlokas:
naiva
kimcit-karomIti yukto manyeta tattvavit /
pashyan-shRNvan-spRshan-jighran-nashnan-gachhan-svapan-shvasan //V -8
pralapan-visRjan-gRhNan-nunmishhan-nimishhan-napi /
indriyAN-Indriy-Artheshhu vartanta-iti dhArayan // V – 9
“I do nothing at all” – thus would the enlightened yogi think – seeing,
hearing, touching, smelling, eating, going, sleeping, breathing, speaking,
answering nature’s calls, grabbing, opening the eyes and closing the eyes; all
the time convinced that it is the senses that move amidst the sense-objects.
brahmaNy-AdhAya karmANi
sangaM tyaktvA karoti yaH /
lipyate na sa
pApena padma-patram-ivAmbhasA // V-10
He who does actions, offering them to Brahman, abandoning all
attachment, is not tainted by sin, as a lotus leaf is untainted by water on it.
This analogy of “water on a lotus leaf” is a well-understood analogy in
the culture of the length and breadth of
kAyena manasA
buddhyA kevalair-indriyair-api /
yoginaH karma
kurvanti sangaM tyaktv-Atma-shuddhaye // V – 11
Abandoning all attachment, the yogi performs actions only with the body
mind intellect and even by the senses -- all this for the purification of his
BMI.
“Atma-shuddhaye” – for the purification of the
self. Here the self is the
outer self, the BMI. The real Self, the Atman, needs no purification because it
is pure. So when
Sarva-karmANi
manasA sannyasy-Aste sukhaM vashI /
navadvAre pure
dehI naiva kurvan-na kArayan // V -13
Mentally renouncing all actions and remaining self-controlled, the
embodied one rests happily in the nine-gated city, neither acting nor causing
action.
anAditvAn-nirguNatvAt paramAtmA-yam-avyayaH /
sharIrastho’pi
kaunteya na karoti na lipyate //XIII-31
Being without beginning and devoid of all attributes, the Supreme Self,
the Imperishable, though dwelling in the body, neither acts, nor is tainted.
And now we come to the eighteenth chapter, where ‘Action’ per se, is
analysed.
kAryam-ityeva yat
karma niyataM kriyate’rjuna /
sangam tyaktvA
phalaM caiva sa tyAgas-sAtviko mataH //XVIII – 9
When an action is done merely because it ought to be done, abandoning
attachment and also the desire for the reward, that renunciation is regarded as
the best.
In XVIII – 23 and 26 He talks about the best action and the best doer in the same strain.
(We have already seen XVIII-26 in detail in Wave 9)
panchaitAni
mahAbAho kAraNAni nibodha me /
sAnkhye kRtAnte
proktAni suddhaye sarva-karmaNAM // XVIII-13
Learn from Me, these five causes that are declared in the Sankhya
system for the accomplishment of all actions .
adhishhTAnaM tathA
kartA karaNam ca pRthag-vidhaM /
vividhAshca
pRthak-ceshhTA daivaM caiv-Atra pancamaM//
sharIra-vAnG-manobhir-yat karma prArabhate naraH /
nyAyyaM va
viparItaM vA pancaite tasya hetavaH //XVIII-14,15
The base (body), the doer, the various
senses, the different functions of various sorts, and the presiding deity as
the fifth. Whatever action a
man performs with his body, speech and mind, whether right or otherwise, these
five are its causes.
Note that the doer (kartA) here is the kshhara-purushha (that is, the
jIva who has identified with the BMI). And that is why
tatraivaM sati
kartAraM AtmAnaM kevalaM to yaH /
pashyaty-akRta-budditvAt na sa pashyati durmatiH //XVIII-16
Such being the case, he who, by mistaken understanding, looks upon his
Self, which is isolated, as the doer,
sees not; he is of perverted intelligence.
And now comes the crucial shloka XVIII-17. So
when the “I-am-not-the-doer” feeling is there, the action touches only the
doer, who is now the BMI only; because the “I-am-not-the-doer” attitude is
equivalent to an identification with the akshhara, so that there is only the
BMI who is doing everything, (cf.V-11). Or one can say that PrakRti is doing
everything (III-27 and (XIII-29). In any case the doer is not the “I”.
Having established who the doer is, Krishna now winds up, first by
talking about a kshhatriya’s svadharma and tops the argument by four shlokas 45
to 48 of the 18th chapter of which we already saw #s47,48 In essence
He says:
Each and every person can reach God by doing his own duty well. Each
person can become perfect by doing his duty. It is better to do one’s own duty
instead of someone else’s greater job. No one should give up one’s duty even
though one doesn’t like it or one does not agree with it.
And the theory of “Actionlessness” applies not only when one finds it
difficult to do his duty (as Arjuna found) but all the time. Krishna sums it up
all in that one shloka, the last in the series on Actionlessness:
asakta-buddhis-sarvatra jitAtma vigata-spRhaH /
naishkarmya-siddhiM paramAM sannyAsena-adhigacchati // XVIII-49
He whose intellect is unattached everywhere, who has subdued his self, empty
of desire – he,
by renunciation, attains the supreme perfection of Actionlessness.
(To Wave
12)
Copyright © V. Krishnamurthy Feb.22, 2004