Block 06.1 · Chapter 6 · Karma Kanda

The True Renunciant Is the Karma Yogi

Verses 6.1–4
Chapter 6: The Yoga of Meditation Difficulty 4/10 Karma Kanda
Layer 1 · Quick Read · 30 seconds
The True Renunciant Is the Karma Yogi covers verses 6.1–4 of Chapter 6. This block explores the theme: Meditation as the practical method for reaching the state described in Chapters 2–5.
Layer 2 · Summary · 2 minutes

In this section of Chapter 6 (The Yoga of Meditation), verses 6.1–4 deliver a focused teaching within the Karma Kanda — the section of the Gita asking "What should I do?"

The block "The True Renunciant Is the Karma Yogi" represents block 1 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: 6.1–4

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

What These Verses Cover (6.1–9):

The real sannyasi (6.1): "One who is unattached to the fruits of work and who works as is obligated is a true renunciant and yogi — not he who lights no fire and performs no duties." The external sign of renunciation (no fire, no possessions) means nothing without internal non-attachment. The real renunciant acts fully and is inwardly free.

The self as friend and enemy (6.5–6): "Raise yourself through yourself; do not degrade yourself. The self alone is its own friend; the self alone is its own enemy." The disciplined mind is a friend; the undisciplined mind is an enemy. This is not abstract — it's a description of the inner war everyone fights daily.

The signs of the self-conquered person (6.7–9): For one who has conquered the self, the Self is at peace — in heat and cold, honor and dishonor, gold and stone, friend and enemy. This person treats all equally. This is not emotional flatness — it is freedom from reactivity.

Difficulty 4/10 — Moderate. Take time with the concepts before moving on.

Key Takeaways
  • This block (06.1) covers verses 6.1–4
  • It is part of the Karma Kanda (Ch.1–6)
  • Study this in sequence — blocks build on each other
Practical Application
Choose one pair of opposites where you are currently reactive: praise/criticism, success/failure, comfort/discomfort. For one week, each time you encounter the one you prefer or dislike, pause and ask: 'Can I hold this more lightly?' Not eliminate the reaction — just notice it without being controlled by it.
Common Mistake
Thinking meditation practice begins when you sit down. Chapter 6's teaching is that equanimity in daily life — in how you respond to honor and dishonor, heat and cold — IS the meditation practice. The formal sitting is the refinement; the daily attitude is the foundation.
← Controlling the Senses: The Stable Foundation Chapter 6 Blocks Preparing the Body and the Seat →