The mind is so blind, that one can’t think and one can’t see.
Arjuna Vishada Yoga
Chapter 1, Verse 47
sañjaya uvāca
evam uktvā’rjunaḥ saṅkhye
rathopastha upāviśat
visṛjya saśaraṁ cāpaṁ
śoka saṁvigna mānasaḥ
Sanjaya says: Having thus spoken on the battlefield, Arjuna sinks down on
the seat of the chariot, casting down the divine bow, his spirit overwhelmed
with sorrow.
Sanjaya sees Arjuna fall down into the seat of his chariot, overwhelmed with
sorrow, in a state of complete dejection. Arjuna puts down his bow and loses himself, miserably concentrating on all this negativity, and feeling pity for himself. When one
has self-pity, one looks for many excuses to not do one’s duty. This is true for Arjuna.
He has created all this fantasy inside his mind: the horrible picture of the destruction of the family, the horrible scene of the ancestors. The film, the drama, which is turning inside his brain, makes him feel terrible, completely depressed. Here ends the first chapter of the Shreemad Bhagavad Gita: the chapter on Arjuna’s Dejection.
Here you have seen that Arjuna expresses all the qualities that one has in oneself. Arjuna doesn’t represent only himself, he represents everyone. Every day, every person goes through these states. Arjuna here is not just Arjuna; he is each one of you. He shows each state that you go through in life. In Chapter 2, we will see what Bhagavan Krishna has to say to Arjuna. Because in such a state, one forgets that God is there in front of you. In that state, one sees oneself as alone, and even forgets about God. Though God is there in front of you, the mind is so clouded, the mind is so blind, that one can’t think and one can’t see.
Bhagavad Gita
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