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Chapter 3 · Verse 24
🪈 Krishna speaks
Pattachitra-style painting of a cosmic vision of what would happen if the great wheel of duty stopped turning — all worlds collapsing and all beings destroyed.

उत्सीदेयुरिमे लोका न कुर्यां कर्म चेदहम्। सङ्करस्य च कर्ता स्यामुपहन्यामिमाः प्रजाः॥

utsīdeyurime lokā na kuryāṁ karma cedaham | saṅkarasya ca kartā syāmupahanyāmimāḥ prajāḥ ||

Word by Word 15 words
उत्सीदेयुः
ut up, away sad to sink, to perish

would perish, would be destroyed

इमे
idam this — these

these

लोकाः
loka world, realm

the worlds, all realms of existence

na not

not

कुर्याम्
kṛ to do, to act

I were to do, I would perform

कर्म
karman action, deed

action, work

चेत्
cet if

if

अहम्
aham I

I

सङ्करस्य
sam together kṛ to make, to mix

chaos, confusion, disorder

ca and

and

कर्ता
kṛ to do, to make

the cause, the author

स्याम्
as to be

I would be

उपहन्याम्
upa near, toward han to strike, to destroy

would destroy, would ruin

इमाः
idam this — these

these

प्रजाः
pra forth jan to be born

beings, people, all living creatures

continues his warning: if he stopped working, all the worlds would collapse. He would be the cause of terrible chaos, and all living beings would be destroyed. Even God cannot afford to stop — because the whole universe depends on his action to keep running.

कथा

When the Wheel Stops Turning

An original story

had given a vision of the cosmos in motion — what would happen if the divine stopped acting, if the great wheel of duty ground to a halt. The vision did not end. It deepened.

had already seen the charioteers drop their reins and the farmers put down their plows. But now 's words carried him further — past the battlefield, past the villages, past the edges of the world he knew, into something vast and frightening.

He saw the sun.

It hung in the sky as it always did, a blazing disc pouring gold across the curve of the earth. But now, in this vision, it hesitated. The light flickered — not dimming, but stuttering, the way a lamp stutters when oil runs low. The sun had always risen because something moved it. Some force, some will, some invisible hand that nudged it along its path each day. And now that hand was still.

The light grew uncertain. Shadows lengthened in the wrong direction. Birds that flew by the sun's position circled aimlessly, calling out in confusion.

Then the rivers.

The Ganga, which had flowed since the beginning of memory, slowed. Not frozen — just slow, the way a person walks when they have forgotten where they are going. The water grew shallow. Fish surfaced, gasping. Reeds along the banks drooped and turned brown. The sound of flowing water — that constant, gentle sound that villages had built their lives around — went quiet.

Then the earth itself. Seeds that had been pressed into dark soil, waiting for the signal to push upward, felt nothing. The signal did not come. They lay still in the ground like small, closed fists refusing to open. Wheat fields that should have been turning gold stayed green and stunted. Rice paddies held their water but produced nothing.

watched all of this, and a cold feeling spread through his chest. It was not the cold of winter. It was the cold of a world losing its reason to move. Not destruction by fire or flood — something worse. A slow unwinding. A forgetting.

"This," said, his voice steady as the vision swirled, "is what happens when the one who holds the wheel lets go. Not war. Not punishment. Just — stopping. And from that stopping comes confusion. And from confusion comes suffering. And from suffering, the end of everything."

He paused. The vision held for one more breath — a world grey and still, beautiful and broken — and then it dissolved like mist in morning sun.

found himself back in the chariot. The horses breathed. The sun shone. The rivers he could not see from here were flowing, he knew, because he could feel their rhythm in the ground beneath the wheels.

He looked at 's hands on the reins. Steady. Unhurried. And he understood, perhaps for the first time, what it cost to keep the world turning — and why someone who owed the world nothing chose to pay that cost anyway.

चिन्तनम्

Think of something in your daily life that works because someone keeps doing it quietly — a parent cooking meals, a teacher preparing lessons. What would happen if they suddenly stopped?