Uddhava Gita
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Yadu Dynasty Retires to Prabhasa
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"The Uddhava-Gita" starts
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Lord Krsna Instructs Uddhava
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The Story of Pingala
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Detachment from All that Is
Material
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The Nature of Fruitive
Activity
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Conditioned & Liberated
Living Entities
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Beyond Renunciation &
Knowledge
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Hamsa-avatara & Sons of Brahma
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Lord Krsna Explains Yoga
System
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Lord Krsna on Mystic Yoga
Perfections
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The Lord’s Opulence
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Lord Krsna’s on Varnasrama
System
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Description of Varnasrama-dharma
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Perfection of Spiritual
Knowledge
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Devotional Service Surpasses
Knowledge
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Lord Krsna’s Explanation of Vedic
Path
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Elements of
Material Creation
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Song of the Avanti
Brahmana
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Philosophy of Sankhya
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Three Modes of Nature and Beyond
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The Aila-Gita
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Lord Krsna’s Instructions on
Deity Worship
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Jnana-yoga
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Bhakti-yoga
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Chapter Eighteen Description
of Varnasrama-dharma 1. The Supreme Personality of Godhead said: One who desires to adopt the
third order of life,
vanaprastha, should enter the forest with a peaceful mind, leaving his
wife with his mature sons, or
else taking her along with him.
2. Having adopted the vanaprastha order of life, one should arrange
one’s sustenance by eating
uncontaminated bulbs, roots and fruits that grow in the forest. One may
dress oneself with tree bark,
grass, leaves or animal skins.
3. The vanaprastha should not groom the hair on his head, body or face,
should not manicure his
nails, should not pass stool and urine at irregular times and should not
make a special endeavor for
dental hygiene. He should be content to take bath in water three times
daily and should sleep on the
ground.
4. Thus engaged as a vanaprastha, one should execute penance during the
hottest summer days by
subjecting oneself to burning fires on four sides and the blazing sun
overhead; during the rainy
season one should remain outside, subjecting oneself to torrents of
rain; and in the freezing winter
one should remain submerged in water up to one’s neck.
5. One may eat foodstuffs prepared with fire, such as grains, or fruits
ripened by time. One may
grind one’s food with mortar and stone or with one’s own teeth.
6. The vanaprastha should personally collect whatever he requires for
his bodily maintenance,
carefully considering the time, place and his own capacity. He should
never collect provisions for
the future.
7. One who has accepted the vanaprastha order of life should perform
seasonal sacrifices by
offering oblations of caru and sacrificial cakes prepared from rice and
other grains found in the
forest. The vanaprastha, however, may never offer animal sacrifices to
Me, even those sacrifices
mentioned in the Vedas.
8. The vanaprastha should perform the agnihotra, darsa and paurnamasa
sacrifices, as he did while
in the grhastha-asrama. He should also perform the vows and sacrifices
of caturmasya, since all of
these rituals are enjoined for the vanaprastha-asrama by expert knowers
of the Vedas.
9. The saintly vanaprastha, practicing severe penances and accepting
only the bare necessities of
life, becomes so emaciated that he appears to be mere skin and bones.
Thus worshiping Me through
severe penances, he goes to the Maharloka planet and then directly
achieves Me.
10. One who with long endeavor executes this painful but exalted
penance, which awards ultimate
liberation, simply to achieve insignificant sense gratification must be
considered the greatest fool.
11. If the vanaprastha is overtaken by old age and because of his
trembling body is no longer able to
execute his prescribed duties, he should place the sacrificial fire
within his heart by meditation.
Then, fixing his mind on Me, he should enter into the fire and give up
his body.
12. If the vanaprastha, understanding that even promotion to Brahmaloka
is a miserable situation,
develops complete detachment from all possible results of fruitive
activities, then he may take the
sannyasa order of life.
13. Having worshiped Me according to scriptural injunctions and having
given all one’s property to
the sacrificial priest, one should place the fire sacrifice within
oneself. Thus, with the mind
completely detached, one should enter the sannyasa order of life.
14. ”This man taking sannyasa is going to surpass us and go back home,
back to Godhead.” Thus
thinking, the demigods create stumbling blocks on the path of the
sannyasi by appearing before him
in the shape of his former wife or other women and attractive objects.
But the s sannyasi should pay
the demigods and their manifestations no heed.
15. If the sannyasi desires to wear something besides a mere kaupina, he
may use another cloth
around his waist and hips to cover the kaupina. Otherwise, if there is
no emergency, he should not
accept anything besides his danda and waterpot.
16. A saintly person should step or place his foot on the ground only
after verifying with his eyes
that there are no living creatures, such as insects, who might be
injured by his foot. He should drink
water only after filtering it through a portion of his cloth, and he
should speak only words that
possess the purity of truth. Similarly, he should perform only those
activities his mind has carefully
ascertained to be pure.
17. One who has not accepted the three internal disciplines of avoiding
useless speech, avoiding
useless activities and controlling the life air can never be considered
a sannyasi merely because of
his carrying bamboo rods.
18. Rejecting those houses that are polluted and untouchable, one should
approach without previous
calculation seven houses and be satisfied with that which is obtained
there by begging. According to
necessity, one may approach each of the four occupational orders of
society.
19. Taking the food gathered through begging, one should leave the
populated areas and go to a
reservoir of water in a secluded place. There, having taken a bath and
washed one’s hands
thoroughly, one should distribute portions of the food to others who may
request it. One should do
this without speaking. Then, having thoroughly cleansed the remnants,
one should eat everything on
one’s plate, leaving nothing for future consumption.
20. Without any material attachment, with senses fully controlled,
remaining enthusiastic, and
satisfied in realization of the Supreme Lord and his own self, the
saintly person should travel about
the earth alone. Having equal vision everywhere, he should be steady on
the spiritual platform.
21. Dwelling in a safe and solitary place, his mind purified by constant
thought of Me, the sage
should concentrate on the soul alone, realizing it to be nondifferent
from Me.
22. By steady knowledge a sage should clearly ascertain the nature of
the soul’s bondage and
liberation. Bondage occurs when the senses are deviated to sense
gratification, and complete control
of the senses constitutes liberation.
23. Therefore, completely controlling the five senses and the mind by
Krsna consciousness, a sage,
having experienced spiritual bliss within the self, should live detached
from insignificant material
sense gratification.
24. The sage should travel in sanctified places, by flowing rivers and
within the solitude of
mountains and forests. He should enter the cities, towns and pasturing
grounds and approach
ordinary working men only to beg his bare sustenance.
25. One in the vanaprastha order of life should always practice taking
charity from others, for one is
thereby freed from illusion and quickly becomes perfect in spiritual
life. Indeed, one who subsists
on food grains obtained in such a humble manner purifies his existence.
26. One should never see as ultimate reality those material things which
obviously will perish. With
consciousness free from material attachment, one should retire from all
activities meant for material
progress in this life and the next.
27. One should logically consider the universe, which is situated within
the Lord, and one’s own
material body, which is composed of mind, speech and life air, to be
ultimately products of the
Lord’s illusory energy. Thus situated in the self, one should give up
one’s faith in these things and
should never again make them the object of one’s meditation.
28. A learned transcendentalist dedicated to the cultivation of
knowledge and thus detached from
external objects, or My devotee who is detached even from desire for
liberation—both neglect those
duties based on external rituals or paraphernalia. Thus their conduct is
beyond the range of rules and
regulations.
29. Although most wise, the paramahamsa should enjoy life like a child,
oblivious to honor and
dishonor; although most expert, he should behave like a stunted,
incompetent person; although most
learned, he should speak like an insane person; and although a scholar
learned in Vedic regulations,
he should behave in an unrestricted manner.
30. A devotee should never engage in the fruitive rituals mentioned in
the karma-kanda section of
the Vedas, nor should he become atheistic, acting or speaking in
opposition to Vedic injunctions.
Similarly, he should never speak like a mere logician or skeptic or take
any side whatsoever in
useless arguments.
31. A saintly person should never let others frighten or disturb him
and, similarly, should never
frighten or disturb other people. He should tolerate the insults of
others and should never himself
belittle anyone. He should never create hostility with anyone for the
sake of the material body, for
he would thus be no better than an animal.
32. The one Supreme Lord is situated within all material bodies and
within everyone’s soul. Just as
the moon is reflected in innumerable reservoirs of water, the Supreme
Lord, although one, is present
within everyone. Thus every material body is ultimately composed of the
energy of the one
Supreme Lord.
33. If at times one does not obtain proper food one should not be
depressed, and when one obtains
sumptuous food one should not rejoice. Being fixed in determination, one
should understand both
situations to be under the control of God.
34. If required, one should endeavor to get sufficient foodstuffs,
because it is always necessary and
proper to maintain one’s health. When the senses, mind and life air are
fit, one can contemplate
spiritual truth, and by understanding the truth one is liberated.
35. A sage should accept the food, clothing and bedding—be they of
excellent or inferior quality—
that come of their own accord.
36. Just as I, the Supreme Lord, execute regulative duties by My own
free will, similarly, one who
has realized knowledge of Me should maintain general cleanliness, purify
his hands with water, take
bath and execute other regulative duties not by force but by his own
free will.
37. A realized soul no longer sees anything as separate from Me, for his
realized knowledge of Me
has destroyed such illusory perception. Since the material body and mind
were previously
accustomed to this kind of perception, it may sometimes appear to recur;
but at the time of death the
self-realized soul achieves opulences equal to Mine.
38. One who is detached from sense gratification, knowing its result to
be miserable, and who
desires spiritual perfection, but who has not seriously analyzed the
process for obtaining Me, should
approach a bona fide and learned spiritual master.
39. Until a devotee has clearly realized spiritual knowledge, he should
continue with great faith and
respect and without envy to render personal service to the guru, who is
nondifferent from Me.
40-41. One who has not controlled the six forms of illusion [lust,
anger, greed, excitement, false
pride and intoxication], whose intelligence, the leader of the senses,
is extremely attached to
material things, who is bereft of knowledge and detachment, who adopts
the sannyasa order of life
to make a living, who denies the worshipable demigods, his own self and
the Supreme Lord within
himself, thus ruining all religious principles, and who is still
infected by material contamination, is
deviated and lost both in this life and the next.
42. The main religious duties of a sannyasi are equanimity and
nonviolence, whereas for the
vanaprastha austerity and philosophical understanding of the difference
between the body and soul
are prominent. The main duties of a householder are to give shelter to
all living entities and perform
sacrifices, and the brahmacari is mainly engaged in serving the
spiritual master.
43. A householder may approach his wife for sex only at the time
prescribed for begetting children.
Otherwise, the householder should practice celibacy, austerity,
cleanliness of mind and body,
satisfaction in his natural position, and friendship toward all living
entities. Worship of Me is to be
practiced by all human beings, regardless of social or occupational
divisions.
44. One who worships Me by his prescribed duty, having no other object
of worship, and who
remains conscious of Me as present in all living entities, achieves
unflinching devotional service
unto Me.
45. My dear Uddhava, I am the Supreme Lord of all worlds, and I create
and destroy this universe,
being its ultimate cause. I am thus the Absolute Truth, and one who
worships Me with unfailing
devotional service comes to Me.
46. Thus, one who has purified his existence by execution of his
prescribed duties, who fully
understands My supreme position and who is endowed with scriptural and
realized knowledge, very
soon achieves Me.
47. Those who are followers of this varnasrama system accept religious
principles according to
authorized traditions of proper conduct. When such varnasrama duties are
dedicated to Me in loving
service, they award the supreme perfection of life.
48. My dear saintly Uddhava, I have now described to you, just as you
inquired, the means by
which My devotee, perfectly engaged in his prescribed duty, can come
back to Me, the Supreme
Personality of Godhead.
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