Krishna did something unexpected. He spoke about the Vedas — the
most sacred texts in the world, the foundation of every ritual,
every prayer, every tradition Arjuna had been raised on — and he
said: go beyond them.
Not reject them. Not burn them. Not pretend they do not matter.
Go beyond them.
There is a difference, and it is enormous.
Think of a school. A good school. The kind where the teachers
care and the lessons matter and you learn things that change the
shape of your mind. For twelve years, you sit in classrooms.
You learn to read, to calculate, to think. The school gives you
structure, discipline, a framework for understanding the world.
It is essential. Without it, you would be lost.
But the point of school is not to stay in school forever. The
point is to graduate.
The Vedas, Krishna was saying, are the school. The three gunas
— sattva (goodness), rajas (passion), tamas (darkness) — are
the subjects taught there. The rituals are the homework. The
rewards are the grades. And all of it is real. All of it matters.
All of it builds something inside you that you will need later.
But later comes. The bell rings. The gates open. And beyond
the school walls is the field — open, vast, unstructured, full
of wind and weather and the kind of learning that no textbook
can contain.
"Be free from duality," Krishna said. Hot and cold. Praise and
blame. Winning and losing. These are the pairs of opposites that
keep you swinging like a pendulum, and a pendulum never arrives
anywhere.
"Be beyond acquiring and preserving." Stop chasing what you
do not have. Stop clinging to what you do. Both are chains,
and they are made of the same metal.
"Be established in the Self." Find the part of you that does
not swing, does not chase, does not cling. The still center.
The one who watches.
Arjuna listened. Somewhere behind him, a conch sounded — a long,
low note that hung in the air like a question. Krishna let it
fade before he spoke again.
"I am not telling you to abandon what you have learned. I am
telling you that you are ready for what comes next."