Swami Mukundananda Bhagavad Gita -
"You have a right to perform your prescribed duty, but you are not entitled to the fruits of action. Never consider yourself the cause of the results of your activities, nor be attached to inaction."
A strange sensation spread through Rohan—not comfort, but clarity. For years, his anxiety had been a direct result of this one mistake: he had tied his inner peace to external outcomes.
Rohan wasn't religious in a conventional sense, but he understood the principle. He accepted the role. He worked with even more passion than before, but without the clutching fear. He was the charioteer, not the horse. He steered, but he didn't whip himself bloody over every pothole. swami mukundananda bhagavad gita
"I am not this body, nor this mind. I am the eternal soul. Let the battle begin."
Within a year, the "failing division" turned around. The board, embarrassed, offered him his old job back. Rohan smiled and declined. He had learned the Gita's final lesson from Swami Mukundananda: true freedom wasn't a corner office. It was the ability to sit in the chariot of life, look at the battlefield of challenges, and say with steady eyes: "You have a right to perform your prescribed
"What’s the point?" he whispered. His identity—the "successful Rohan"—had been the very ground beneath his feet. Now, the ground had vanished.
A friend, seeing his state, didn't offer a job or a lawyer, but a book. "Just read the first chapter," she said. "But read JKYog's translation. Swami Mukundananda's commentary." Rohan wasn't religious in a conventional sense, but
"Read this. Not as a scripture. Read it as a user manual for the human mind."