Guidance for

Stress

Managing life's pressures

Learn to work with excellence while maintaining inner calm. The Gita shows how to act skillfully without being overwhelmed by outcomes.

20 verses to guide you • Ancient wisdom for modern challenges

Verses for Stress

Focus on action, not outcomes

Karmany evadhikaras te ma phalesu kadacana, ma karma-phala-hetur bhur ma te sango 'stv akarmani

You have a right to perform your prescribed duty, but you are not entitled to the fruits of action. Never consider yourself the cause of the results of your activities, and never be attached to not doing your duty.

  • Detachment from results
  • Duty over desire

Action is better than inaction

Niyatam kuru karma tvam karma jyayo hy akarmanah, sharira-yatrapi ca te na prasiddhyed akarmanah

You should thus perform your prescribed Vedic duties, since action is superior to inaction. By ceasing activity, even your bodily maintenance will not be possible.

  • Even survival requires action
  • Fulfill your responsibilities

Sensory experiences are temporary

Matra-sparshas tu kaunteya shitoshna-sukha-duhkha-dah, agamapayino 'nityas tams titikshasva bharata

O son of Kunti, the contact between the senses and sense objects gives rise to fleeting perceptions of happiness and distress. These are impermanent, and come and go like the winter and summer seasons. O descendant of Bharata, one must learn to tolerate them without being disturbed.

  • Develop tolerance for discomfort
  • Don't be swayed by passing phenomena

Withstanding desire and anger before death is the mark of the yogi

Shaknothaiva yah sodhum prak sharira-vimokshanat, kama-krodhodbhavam vegam sa yuktah sa sukhi narah

One who is able to withstand the impulse of desire and anger even before giving up the body — that person is a yogi and is happy. The capacity to endure these powerful inner forces without being swept away is the very definition of yogic mastery.

  • Inner discipline is more significant than outer renunciation
  • True happiness comes from mastering inner impulses

Treat opposites with equanimity

Sukha-duhkhe same kritva labhalabhau jayajayau, tato yuddhaya yujyasva naivam papam avapsyasi

Fight for the sake of duty, treating alike happiness and distress, loss and gain, victory and defeat. Fulfilling your responsibility in this way, you will never incur sin.

  • Duty transcends personal preference
  • Balanced action prevents karma

Surrender all actions to the divine

Mayi sarvani karmani sannyasyadhyatma-cetasa, nirashir nirmamo bhutva yudhyasva vigata-jvarah

Therefore, surrendering all your works unto Me, with mind intent on the self, free from desire and possessiveness, and cured of mental fever, fight.

  • Act without personal agenda
  • Freedom from mental anxiety

The Brahman-knower is not swayed by pleasant or unpleasant events

Na prahrisyet priyam prapya nodvijet prapya capriyam, sthira-buddhir asammudho brahma-vid brahmani sthitah

One who is not elated upon receiving the pleasant and not disturbed upon receiving the unpleasant, with steady intellect and undeluded — such a knower of Brahman is established in Brahman. Emotional equanimity in both pleasure and pain is the sign of the Brahman-knower.

  • Steady intellect and freedom from delusion mark the realized person
  • Establishment in Brahman transcends all emotional fluctuation

Mental conquest leads to supreme peace

Jitatmanah prasantasya paramatma samahitah, shitoshna-sukha-duhkheshu tatha manapamanayoh

One who has conquered the mind has already reached the Supreme Self, for they have attained tranquility. To such a person, happiness and distress, heat and cold, honor and dishonor are all the same.

  • Equanimity in all conditions
  • Transcending dualities

Equanimity in pleasure and pain

Duhkhesv anudvigna-manah sukhesu vigata-sprhah, vita-raga-bhaya-krodhah sthita-dhir munir ucyate

One who is not disturbed in spite of miseries, who doesn't crave happiness, and who is free from attachment, fear, and anger, is called a sage of steady mind.

  • Freedom from reactive emotions
  • Mental stability through detachment

Contentment (nitya-tripta) transforms all action into non-action

Tyaktva karma-phalasangam nitya-tripto nirasrayah, karmany abhipravrittoapi naiva kimcit karoti sah

Having abandoned all attachment to the fruits of action, always content and without any dependence, such a person, even while engaged in action, does not do anything at all.

  • Inner independence and detachment from results equals true freedom
  • Activity with no ego-claim is equivalent to non-activity in terms of karma

How to use these verses

Read slowly and contemplate. Don't rush through these verses. Pick one that resonates and sit with it for a few minutes.

Return regularly. Ancient wisdom reveals itself gradually. Come back to these verses when you need them.

Apply to your situation. Consider how each teaching relates specifically to what you're experiencing right now.

Share what helps. If a verse brings you peace or clarity, share it with others who might need it.

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