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________________ THE SECRET OF WORK 37 will still continue to exist until man's character changes. We read in the Bhagavad-Gita again and again that we must all work incessantly. All work is by nature composed of good and evil. We cannot do any work which will not do some good somewhere; there cannot be any work which will not cause some harm somewhere. Every work must necessarily be a mixture of good and evil; yet we are commanded to work incessantly. Good and evil will both have their results, will produce their Karma. Good action will entail upon us good effect; bad action, bad. But good and bad are both bondages of the soul. The solution reached in the Gita in regard to this bondage-producing nature of work is, that if we do not attach ourselves to the work we do, it will not have any binding effect on our soul. We shall try to understand what is meant by this “non-attachment" to work. This is the one central idea in the Gita; work incessantly, but be not attached to it. “Samskâra” can be translated very nearly by inherent tendency. Using the simile of a lake for the mind, every ripple, every wave that rises in the mind, when it subsides, does not die out entirely, but leaves a mark and a future possibility of that wave coming out again. This mark, with the possibility of the wave reappearing, is what is called Samskara. Every work that we do, every movement of the body, every thought that we think, leaves such an impression on the
SR No.011074
Book TitleKarma Yoga Bhakti Yoga
Original Sutra AuthorN/A
AuthorSwami Vivekanand
PublisherRamkrishna Vivekananda Center of New York INC
Publication Year1939
Total Pages239
LanguageEnglish
ClassificationBook_English
File Size11 MB
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