Yes 🙏 You’re pointing to a very relevant verse!
Bhagavad Gita 6.22 beautifully explains the nature of Samadhi sukh (the bliss of yoga).
Here’s the Sanskrit with meaning:
स तं सुखं याति परं लब्ध्वा, अन्यं ततः न अधिकं मन्यते।
यस्मिन्स्थितो न दुःखेन, गुरुणापि विचाल्यते॥
(Bhagavad Gita 6.22)
Transliteration:
sa taṁ sukhaṁ yāti paraṁ labdhvā,
anyaṁ tataḥ na adhikaṁ manyate |
yasmin sthito na duḥkhena,
guruṇāpi vicālyate ||
Meaning:
- “Having attained that supreme bliss (Samadhi sukh), one does not think there is any higher gain.
And being established in it, one is not shaken even by the heaviest of sorrows.”
Essence:
Krishna here tells Arjuna that the joy of Samadhi (union with the Self) is the highest form of happiness:
- It makes worldly pleasures seem insignificant.
- Once established in it, even great suffering (gurunāpi duḥkhena) cannot disturb the yogi.
- This is why it is called Atma-sukha or Samadhi-sukha—bliss of the Self, beyond dualities.
✨ So, the Gita confirms what we just discussed: Samadhi sukh is supreme, unshakable, and not dependent on anything external.
Would you like me to also bring in the next verse (6.23)? It actually explains how this Samadhi sukh is reached—through steady detachment and mastery over desire.
No comments:
Post a Comment