AT THE FEET OF THE MOTHER
Ask Alok da

What exactly is buddhi yoga in Gita?Β (1) Is it the yoga of using the faculty of discrimination primarily, which means it is just another name for Jnana Yoga?πŸŽβš”οΈπŸ•‰οΈπŸ“œβœ¨Β 

It is part of the Sankhya Yoga which itself is a form of Jnana Yoga. Historically however the term ‘Jnana Yoga’ came later. The word that was well known was Sankhya which is perhaps the oldest school. 

(2) What are the features of Buddhi Yoga?

In the actual practice the method is to detach the intelligence from outer things (senses and their objects) and fix it upon the One Self. It is to take a witness attitude towards Nature and all its activities with their ever changing appearances. By doing so and not consenting to every push and pull, our consciousness enters into a Witness State. It gets separated from appearances and gets fixed in the One. The discursive movement of the intellect must withdraw from running after sense stimulus or leap at every mental suggestion. It must be restrained by the mind and buddhi, the intelligent-will and fixed in the One, the supreme Divine Self. Action must not be performed for particular results but done in a state of inner stillness. This inner renunciation of the fruits and fixing the consciousness in the One Divine liberates us from the bondage that accrue due to the action as it generates various reactions of anger, grief, pleasure, disappointments, happiness etc. 

There is here a subtle difference however as in the traditional Jnana Yoga the aspect of nishkama Karma, equanimity, fixing the intelligence in the Divine beyond the One Self are not there. Karma is regarded as a bondage, to be dropped off or reduced to a minimum after realising the Self. 

(3) Can stoicism considered a stage as well as a part of Buddhi yoga?

Stoicism does have certain features that point towards the Jnana Yoga but its idea of the Divine Principle is limited to the Kshara Purusha, the Cosmic Intelligence involved in Nature. The stoic attitude can be one of practices that help us detach from the touches and reactions of Nature. At best it may deepen into equality. But it doesn’t lead to the state of Stithpragya of the Gita, that state of imperturbable calm but more a capacity to bear and endure without the usual reactions. 

Affectionately,

Alok Da

Share this…

Related Posts

I dreamt that we three school friends entered into a field. There was a stage some people seated on the stage with small small groups & gossiping themselves & other are in the field ground & field was full with people. I noticed a tiny puppy attacking to the people, but when we entered it started attacking me I just played a funny with it by just jumping; it unable to catch me or bite me after 3-4 times of jumping I just jump to the stage & it caught my hand while going to bite me I shaked my hand & it fell down.Β πŸ’€πŸ’­πŸŒ™β­

These are generally attacks from forces in the vital world. It is difficult to say what it represented. Dogs generally represent faithfulness. But here it seems to be less of a …

Read More >

There was a path many says to meeting with the Divine in sleep, it was written in mandukya upnishad uses the dream state (Svapna) as an analogy to explain the nature of reality and consciousness, ultimately guiding the seeker to transcend all states. What does it means?Β πŸ’­πŸŒœπŸ’€πŸ˜΄

The Mandukya Upanishad describes that the One Reality presents itself at four levels. It is a fourfold Reality so to say. There is the waking state whence the Reality presents itself in the outer field through the sensory experience …

Read More >

Sri Aurobindo mentioned in The Mother book that β€œ Regard this life given to you for the Divine & its work, ask for nothing ……”. So how to make yourself always fit for herself spiritually without medicines?πŸͺ·πŸŒ³πŸ’ŠπŸ©ΊΒ 

We should not have rigid ideas about anything. Fitness for the Divine Work has little to do with taking or not taking medicines. What is needed is sincerity, self-mastery, absolute faith, surrender of oneself, perseverance and …

Read More >