Close your eyes for a moment and imagine this.
Someone offers you everything. Not just one thing — everything.
The largest house in your city, filled with every book, every game,
every instrument you have ever wanted. A garden that stretches to
the horizon, where mangoes grow year-round and peacocks walk on
emerald lawns. Friends who adore you. Awards that line the walls.
The power to make any rule you like, and no one to say no.
Now imagine that none of it matters.
That is where Arjuna stands. He is not a poor man dreaming of
riches. He is a prince who can see the throne from where he sits —
it is right there, waiting for him on the other side of this
battle. And he is saying, clearly and without exaggeration: even
if you gave me that throne, even if you added the heavens on top,
I would still feel this emptiness.
His grief is not the kind that wants something. It is the kind
that has swallowed wanting itself. It sits in his chest like a
stone sunk in a riverbed, too heavy for any current to move. His
senses are drying up — that is the word he uses, ucchoṣaṇam, like
a riverbed in summer when the water retreats and leaves cracked
mud behind. His eyes see the armies but do not truly see them.
His ears hear the conchs but the sound is muffled, far away, as
though he is underwater. His skin feels the wind on his face but
it does not refresh him.
This is what deep grief does. It does not just make you sad. It
makes the whole world go grey. Food loses its taste. Music loses
its melody. The sunrise is just light. You walk through a garden
and smell nothing.
Arjuna is describing something many people experience but few can
name: the moment when external success cannot touch internal pain.
When no amount of winning can fill the hole that loss has carved.
He is honest enough to say it out loud. He does not pretend that
victory will heal him. He does not bargain. He simply names the
truth: this grief is bigger than any prize the world can offer.
And that honesty, painful as it is, is the very thing that will
allow Krishna's teaching to reach him. You cannot heal a wound
you refuse to look at.