From the Archives of Swami Jyotirmayananda
The demands of modern life often leave us exhausted, swinging between a desire to accomplish worldly goals and a desperate craving to escape it all. This tension between action and the longing for peace is a universal symptom of a mind caught in illusion. We seek an ancient cure, a shift in perspective that transforms our daily obligations into a path of liberation. Sri Swami Jyotirmayananda, the last living direct disciple of Swami Sivananda, offers profound clarity on this exact struggle through the teachings of Karma Sannyasa Yoga.
As we live in the world, actions are natural. We act through our thoughts, our speech, and our hands. Yet, when one begins to study spiritual texts, a conflict often arises. The mind grasps the ideal of renunciation and falsely believes that to be spiritual, one must abandon all duties. Due to an immaturity of understanding, we create an internal war.
The Bhagavad Gita resolves this through a simple, divine algebra: doing your duties with the right understanding transforms binding action (karma) into liberating freedom (akarma). When your actions, emotions, will, and reason are harmonized, your performance in the world naturally improves. You begin to recognize the subtle difference between actions that disturb your peace and actions that are deeply purposeful.
Internal Satisfaction over External Results
In the realm of time and space, any worldly accomplishment is transient. It will eventually fade. However, every action carries two components: the external result, and the internal satisfaction. The shift from a worldly actor to a true Karma Yogi happens when you move your attention away from external success and toward internal spiritual expansion.
This does not make you impractical. If your primary focus is on purifying your heart, you link yourself with the Divine. When you work for purity, adverse situations miraculously change into prosperous ones, and enemies become friends. The wafting fragrance of action (Karma) and the inward opening of the heart (Jnana) are two sides of the same spiritual coin.
The Illusion of Doership
A profound realization on the spiritual path is understanding that the ego is not the true doer. Swamiji shares the story of a rat leading a camel by a string. The rat felt immensely proud, believing it was controlling this massive beast. But when they reached a puddle of water, the rat stopped, terrified. The camel simply told the rat to jump on its back and crossed with ease, proving who was truly doing the moving.

Our ego acts just like that rat. It claims the triumphs and suffers the defeats, completely ignoring the infinite power of God that sustains our heartbeat, our breath, and the very galaxies above. The Divine Self does not create this illusion of doership; it is sustained by our own ignorance (Avidya).
Overcoming Obstacles to Knowledge
Understanding these truths intellectually is only the beginning. The mind is plagued by doubts (Shanka) and a feeling of unworthiness (Asambhavana), thinking that liberation is impossible in this lifetime. It feels as daunting as a tiny sparrow trying to empty the ocean drop by drop with a piece of straw.
Yet, as the story of the sparrow teaches us, when we put forth our sincere self-effort and invoke divine grace (represented by the mighty bird Garuda), the vast ocean of our karmas becomes nothing more than a mud puddle. Grace makes the impossible attainable. Through listening (Shravana), reflection (Manana), and deep meditation (Nididhyasana), the twisted understanding of the ego falls away.
May these teachings awaken the treasury of divine knowledge within your own heart.
Scholar’s Corner
Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 5, Verse 14: “The Divine Self does not create doership in people, nor does He work. He does not create relationships between the works and their fruits. It is nature (Avidya) that sustains these illusions.”
Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 5, Verse 15: “The all-pervading divinity does not take the sin or the virtue of anyone. It is because knowledge is veiled by ignorance that individual souls are deluded.”
Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 5, Verse 16: “For those whose ignorance has been destroyed by the knowledge of the Self, wisdom shines forth like the sun, revealing the Reality of the transcendental Self.”
Glossary of Sanskrit Terms
- Karma Sannyasa Yoga: The yoga of renunciation of action (specifically, renouncing the fruits and the ego-sense of action).
- Avidya: Ignorance; the fundamental misapprehension of reality that makes the soul forget its divine nature.
- Swadharma: One’s own righteous duty, in harmony with their inner nature.
- Jiva: The individual soul, seemingly bound by illusion.
- Mukti: Liberation from the cycle of birth and death.
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