Every morning, before the noise of the world floods in, there is a quiet window — a space of pure possibility. It is in this space that the Bhagavad Gita speaks most clearly. Today…
Bhagavad Gita · Chapter 16 · Verse 9
एतां दृष्टिमवष्टभ्य नष्टात्मानोऽल्पबुद्धयः।प्रभवन्त्युग्रकर्माणः क्षयाय जगतोऽहिताः।।16.9।।
etāṁ dṛiṣhṭim avaṣhṭabhya naṣhṭātmāno ’lpa-buddhayaḥ prabhavanty ugra-karmāṇaḥ kṣhayāya jagato ’hitāḥ
"Holding this view, these ruined souls of small intellect and fierce deeds come forth as enemies of the world, intent on its destruction."
।।16.9।।उपर्युक्त (नास्तिक) दृष्टिका आश्रय लेनेवाले जो मनुष्य अपने नित्य स्वरूपको नहीं मानते, जिनकी बुद्धि तुच्छ है, जो उग्रकर्मा और संसारके शत्रु हैं, उन मनुष्योंकी सामर्थ्यका उपयोग जगत्का नाश करनेके लिये ही होता है।
Every morning, before the noise of the world floods in, there is a quiet window — a space of pure possibility. It is in this space that the Bhagavad Gita speaks most clearly. Today's verse from Chapter 16 is not merely ancient text. It is a living instruction, as relevant to your life right now as it was to Arjuna on the battlefield five thousand years ago.
"Holding this view, these ruined souls of small intellect and fierce deeds come forth as enemies of the world, intent on its destruction." These words distil an entire way of being. They ask a question that cuts through all the noise of modern life: Are you acting from your deepest values, or are you reacting to fear and desire?
We live in an age of distraction, of constant comparison, of anxiety about outcomes we cannot control. Social media shows us a thousand versions of a life we are not living. The news is a relentless stream of fear. Against this background, Krishna's teaching feels almost radical: do your duty, act from love, and release the fruits. Not because outcomes don't matter — but because your peace cannot depend on them.
The Mahabharata tells us that even the greatest souls — Yudhishthira, Bhishma, Draupadi — were tested by moments where every choice seemed wrong. The Gita is born from exactly such a moment. And what emerges from that crucible is not a commandment, but an invitation: to know yourself deeply enough that you can act with clarity even in confusion, with love even in conflict.
Write today's verse somewhere you will see it. Let it be a gentle interruption to the ordinary rush of the day. When you feel overwhelmed, anxious, or stuck, return to it. Let its wisdom be an anchor. The Gita is not a book to be read once and shelved — it is a companion for the whole of life.
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