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Bhagavad Gita 2.70

Spoken by Krishna ★ Essential verse · Verse 70 of 72

आपूर्यमाणमचलप्रतिष्ठं समुद्रमापः प्रविशन्ति यद्वत् । तद्वत्कामा यं प्रविशन्ति सर्वे स शान्तिमाप्नोति न कामकामी ॥

āpūryamāṇam acala-pratiṣṭhaṃ samudram āpaḥ praviśanti yadvat | tadvat kāmā yaṃ praviśanti sarve sa śāntim āpnoti na kāma-kāmī ||

All desires pour into the sage like rivers into the ocean — the ocean stays unmoved. That is peace.

Word by word (3)
āpūryamāṇam acala-pratiṣṭham samudram
— the ocean, being filled yet immovably established · Āpūryamāṇam = being filled (present passive participle of ā+pūr, to fill completely). The ocean is perpetually being filled by all the rivers that enter it — yet it is never not-full, and never overflows. Acala-pratiṣṭha = immovably established (acala = unmoving + pratiṣṭha = established, rooted). The ocean is constantly receiving and yet fundamentally unchanged.
āpaḥ praviśanti yadvat
— as the waters enter · Yadvat = just as, in the same way as. The simile structure: yadvat (just as) ... tadvat (so too). The waters (āpaḥ) entering the ocean are desires entering the sage. The ocean does not rush to receive them, does not try to stop them — they simply enter into its fullness without disturbing it.
na kāma-kāmī
— not the one who desires after desires · Kāma-kāmī = one who desires desires (kāma desired, kāmin = one who desires). The compound is philosophically precise: the sage is not someone with no kāma entering — desires continue to arise. The difference is that the sage does not kāma-kāmi (desire the desires, run after them, identify with them). The desires enter; the sage is unmoved.

As rivers pour into the ocean from all sides — and yet the ocean, ever full, remains immovably still — so the one into whom all desires flow attains peace. Not the one who runs after desires.

A modern analogy

Think of a person who has built deep inner stability over years: offers come in, criticisms arrive, temptations appear, losses occur — all of it flows through their awareness like rivers into an ocean. They are fully aware of everything entering — they are not numb. But the ocean does not overflow when a river enters. Their peace is not the absence of desires — it is the ocean's depth that makes no single river enough to disturb it.

Take with you

  • The sage does not have zero desires — desires flow in. The key is ocean-quality: vast enough that no single desire overflows it.
  • Running after desires (kāma-kāmī) is the opposite of this: the person who chases each river, never achieving the ocean's stillness.
  • Peace comes from depth of being, not from the absence of inputs. Build the ocean, not the dam.
  • This is the most hopeful verse in the sthitaprajña portrait: you don't need to eliminate all desires — you need to build enough inner depth that they don't overwhelm.

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Public-domain translations (5) compare all →

He attains peace into whom all desires enter, as waters flow into the sea which, though ever being filled, remains unmoved — not he who hankers after objects of desire. [1]

He attains peace into whom all desires enter as waters enter the ocean, which, though ever being filled, is ever motionless — not he who desires objects of desire. [4]

That man in whom all desires flow and are absorbed, even as the rivers flow into the ocean which is full but remains unmoved — that man attains to peace, and not he who cherishes desire. [6]

He who is the ocean — all the streams Poured into it but can nowise disturb — Whose peace, though all desires flow in, Comes not from craving: such a one hath peace. [7]

He attains peace into whom all desires flow just as the ocean, which is ever full on all sides, receives the waters — not he who is desirous of desires. [9]

This verse speaks to

Where this thread continues

Verse 70 of 72 · back to Chapter 2