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Bhagavad Gita 18.37

Spoken by Krishna · Verse 37 of 78

यत् तद् अग्रे विषम् इव परिणामे ऽमृतोपमम् । तत् सुखं सात्त्विकं प्रोक्तम् आत्मबुद्धिप्रसादजम् ॥

yat tad agre viṣam iva pariṇāme 'mṛtopamam | tat sukhaṃ sāttvikaṃ proktam ātmabuddhi-prasādajam ||

Sāttvic sukha: poison-like at first, nectar-like at the end — born of the clarity of Self-knowing intellect.

Word by word (3)
yat tad agre viṣam iva pariṇāme 'mṛtopamam
— that which (yat tad) at first/at the beginning (agre = at the front/beginning) is like poison (viṣam iva), but at the end/in the outcome (pariṇāme = at the completion/transformation) is like nectar (amṛtopamam = amṛta + upama = nectar-compared-to) — the temporal arc of sāttvic happiness: difficult at first, beautiful at the end
tat sukhaṃ sāttvikaṃ proktam ātmabuddhi-prasādajam
— that (tat) happiness (sukham) is declared/proclaimed (proktam) sāttvic (sāttvikaṃ), born of/arisen from (jam = born, from jan = to be born) the clarity/tranquility (prasāda = serenity, grace, clarity) of the self-knowing intellect (ātma-buddhi = self + buddhi = buddhi turned toward the ātman) — the source of sāttvic happiness: ātma-buddhi-prasāda
ātmabuddhi-prasādajam
— born of the prasāda (clarity/grace/serenity) of ātma-buddhi (the intellect oriented toward the Self/ātman); prasāda = the specific quality of clarity and peace that arises when the buddhi is purified and turned toward its source (ātman); this is not intellectual happiness but the joy that arises naturally when the inner instrument is clean and self-oriented; the happiness is a by-product of ātma-jñāna (Self-knowledge)

That happiness which is like poison at first but like nectar at the end — that is declared sāttvic, born of the clarity of the self-knowing intellect.

A modern analogy

Sāttvic happiness is like learning a musical instrument or a new language: initially frustrating and difficult (poison-like at first), but with practice (abhyāsa) it becomes an inexhaustible source of joy (nectar-like at the end). Compare this to rājasic happiness: the first bite of junk food is delicious (nectar-like at first) but it leaves a bad aftertaste and craving (poison-like in its consequence).

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Public-domain translations (4) compare all →

MISSING from index. [1]

That which is like poison at first, but like nectar at the end; that happiness is declared to be Sattvika, born of the translucence of intellect due to Self-realisation. [4]

MISSING from index. [9]

That which resembles poison first but resembles nectar in the end, that happiness born of the serenity produced by a knowledge of self, is said to be of the quality of goodness. [13]

This verse speaks to

Where this thread continues

Verse 37 of 78 · back to Chapter 18