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Friday, 11 July 2025·Chapter 16, Verse 7

The Wisdom of Chapter 16, Verse 7: The demoniacal do not know what to do and what to refrain fr

On the battlefield of Kurukshetra, Arjuna stood frozen — his bow slack, his spirit shaken. The great warrior who had never flinched in battle was paralysed by grief, by love, by do…

Bhagavad Gita · Chapter 16 · Verse 7

प्रवृत्तिं च निवृत्तिं च जना न विदुरासुराः।न शौचं नापि चाचारो न सत्यं तेषु विद्यते।।16.7।।

pravṛittiṁ cha nivṛittiṁ cha janā na vidur āsurāḥ na śhauchaṁ nāpi chāchāro na satyaṁ teṣhu vidyate

"The demoniacal do not know what to do and what to refrain from; they have neither purity, nor right conduct, nor truth."

।।16.7।।आसुरी प्रकृतिवाले मनुष्य प्रवृत्ति और निवृत्तिको नहीं जानते और उनमें न बाह्यशुद्धि, न श्रेष्ठ आचरण तथा न सत्य-पालन ही होता है।

The Setting

On the battlefield of Kurukshetra, Arjuna stood frozen — his bow slack, his spirit shaken. The great warrior who had never flinched in battle was paralysed by grief, by love, by doubt. It is in this moment of human weakness that Lord Krishna speaks the timeless words of Chapter 16, Verse 7.

The Shloka

"The demoniacal do not know what to do and what to refrain from; they have neither purity, nor right conduct, nor truth." This verse, drawn from the Bhagavad Gita's Chapter 16 discourse, carries within it a complete philosophy of life — one that does not ask us to renounce the world, but to engage with it fully, without the poison of attachment.

What This Means For Your Life Today

We face our own Kurukshetras every day. A difficult conversation at work. A relationship that demands more than we feel we can give. A decision where every path seems wrong. Krishna's teaching here is not abstract theology — it is a direct instruction to act from your highest self, to do what is right simply because it is right, not because of what you will gain or lose.

The Deeper Teaching

The Gita does not promise a life free of struggle. It promises something far greater: the inner freedom that comes from acting with full awareness, full effort, and full detachment from outcomes. When you stop measuring your worth by results, you discover a peace that no external circumstance can disturb. This is not passive resignation — it is the most courageous form of action there is.

A Practice for Today

Choose one task today — however small — and do it with complete attention and zero attachment to how it will be received. Notice how it feels different. Notice the quality of presence that emerges when you are not anxiously scanning for approval or results. That feeling is the beginning of what Krishna calls Yoga — union with your truest self.

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