Bhagavad Gita 2.66
Spoken by Krishna · Verse 66 of 72
नास्ति बुद्धिरयुक्तस्य न चायुक्तस्य भावना । न चाभावयतः शान्तिरशान्तस्य कुतः सुखम् ॥
nāsti buddhir ayuktasya na cāyuktasya bhāvanā | na cābhāvayataḥ śāntir aśāntasya kutaḥ sukham ||
No discipline → no wisdom → no contemplation → no peace → no happiness. The chain is unbroken.
Word by word (3)
- ayuktasya
- — for the undisciplined / unyoked one · A (without) + yukta (yoked, united — same root as yoga). Ayukta is one who has not achieved inner alignment — not in yoga. The verse builds a chain of negations: no yoga → no buddhi → no bhāvanā → no peace → no happiness. Each step depends on the previous.
- bhāvanā
- — contemplation / meditative cultivation · Bhāvanā from bhāv (to be, to cultivate, to make become). In yogic usage, bhāvanā is the sustained inner cultivation of a state — the deliberate dwelling in a quality of mind. Without buddhi (wisdom), bhāvanā is impossible; the mind cannot cultivate what it cannot discern.
- aśāntasya kutaḥ sukham
- — for the unpeaceful, where is happiness? · Kutaḥ = from where? how? The rhetorical question implies: nowhere. Sukha (happiness, ease) is etymologically related to 'good space' (su + kha, where kha = space, hollow). Aśānti (non-peace, agitation) structurally prevents the inner space (kha) in which happiness can arise.
For the undisciplined there is no wisdom. For the undisciplined there is no contemplation. For one who does not contemplate there is no peace. And for the unpeaceful — where is happiness?
A modern analogy
Someone perpetually scattered — always reactive, never pausing, never practicing any discipline — wonders why they feel chronically anxious and unhappy. The Gita traces the chain: no inner alignment (ayukta) means no clear thinking (buddhi), which means no capacity for deep reflection (bhāvanā), which means no peace (śānti), which means no happiness (sukha). The chain is structural — happiness is downstream of peace, peace is downstream of contemplation, contemplation is downstream of wisdom, wisdom is downstream of inner discipline.
Take with you
- Happiness cannot be pursued directly — it is downstream of peace, which is downstream of contemplation, which requires discipline.
- The modern pursuit of happiness while skipping discipline, wisdom, and contemplation explains much chronic unhappiness.
- Kutaḥ sukham — 'where is happiness?' — is the Gita's compassionate rhetorical question: it's not that happiness is withheld, it's that the conditions haven't been built.
- Build the chain from the bottom up: start with one daily discipline. That single act seeds everything above it.
Public-domain translations (5) compare all →
For the man of uncontrolled mind there is no wisdom, and for the man of uncontrolled mind there is no contemplation; for the non-contemplative there is no peace, and for the unpeaceful how can there be happiness? [1]
There is no wisdom for the unsteady, and there is no meditation for the unsteady; and for the unmeditative there is no peace; for the unpeaceful, how can there be happiness? [4]
For the man who has not controlled himself there is no wisdom, nor for such a man is there the power of contemplation. Without contemplation there can be no peace; and without peace, how can there be happiness? [6]
The soul that is not governed cannot know; The spirit unconfirmed can have no peace; And how should there be happy days for one Who knows not peace? [7]
For the unsteady there is no intelligence; for the unsteady there is no power of contemplation; and for the non-contemplative there is no peace. For the unpeaceful, how can there be happiness? [9]
This verse speaks to
Where this thread continues
In prasāda (inner clarity), all suffering falls away. The serene mind's wisdom becomes swiftly established.
When mind follows the wandering senses, wisdom is carried away — like wind sweeps a ship off course.
Supreme bliss comes naturally to the yogi whose mind is fully at peace, passion quieted, stainless — Brahman-become.
Speech tapas: non-disturbing, true, agreeable, beneficial words — plus daily svādhyāya (sacred study).
Steady wisdom begins here: when all desires fall away and the Self finds fullness in itself alone.
Daivī wealth begins: abhaya, sattva-śuddhi, jñāna-yoga, dāna, dama, yajña, svādhyāya, tapa, ārjava.
Verse 66 of 72 · back to Chapter 2