Block 01.6 · Chapter 1 · Karma Kanda

Arjuna Drops Gandiva

Verses 1.47
Chapter 1: The Yoga of Arjuna's Despair Difficulty 2/10 Karma Kanda
Layer 1 · Quick Read · 30 seconds
Arjuna Drops Gandiva covers verses 1.47 of Chapter 1. This block explores the theme: Crisis, moral confusion, and the birth of the question.
Layer 2 · Summary · 2 minutes

In this section of Chapter 1 (The Yoga of Arjuna's Despair), verses 1.47 deliver a focused teaching within the Karma Kanda — the section of the Gita asking "What should I do?"

The block "Arjuna Drops Gandiva" represents block 6 of 6 in this chapter. Understanding this passage builds directly on the chapter's central theme.

Work through this block at your own pace. Read the verses first, then return here for the lesson structure.

Layer 3 · Lesson · 5–10 minutes

Verse Range: 1.47

Where we are: Chapter 1 of the Bhagavad Gita — The Yoga of Arjuna's Despair. This is block 6 of 6 in the chapter.

What These Verses Cover (1.45–47):

Arjuna has made his case. He has argued against the war on social, moral, and family grounds. Now he reaches the end of his arguments — and breaks down completely. He says: "Better to be killed unarmed and unresisting." He sits in the chariot, drops his bow and arrows, his mind overwhelmed with grief.

Chapter 1 ends exactly here. The teacher has not yet spoken. The seeker has not yet asked for guidance. He has only collapsed. This is the Gita's first lesson: before any teaching can enter, you must reach the end of your own answers. Arjuna's dropped bow is the necessary prerequisite for the entire dialogue that follows.

Every student of the Gita meets their own version of this moment — the point where conventional wisdom runs out and something deeper is needed.

Difficulty 2/10 — Entry level. Focus on understanding the story and situation.

Key Takeaways
  • This block (01.6) covers verses 1.47
  • It is part of the Karma Kanda (Ch.1–6)
  • Study this in sequence — blocks build on each other
Practical Application
Identify something you thought you understood, then found yourself lost inside. Name the moment when your existing framework failed. That failure is not a problem — it is the beginning of real learning, just as Arjuna's dropped bow begins the Gita.
Common Mistake
Reading Arjuna's collapse as defeat. It is actually the moment of maximum readiness. The seeker who is certain they already know needs no teaching. The seeker who has genuinely exhausted their own answers is ready to learn.
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