Bhagavad Gita 6.17
Spoken by Krishna · Verse 17 of 47
युक्ताहारविहारस्य युक्तचेष्टस्य कर्मसु | युक्तस्वप्नावबोधस्य योगो भवति दुःखहा ||१७||
yuktāhāravihārasya yuktaceṣṭasya karmasu | yuktasvapnāvabodhasya yogo bhavati duḥkhahā || 17 ||
Regulate food, recreation, effort and sleep — and yoga becomes the destroyer of all pain.
Word by word (3)
- yukta-āhāra-vihārasya
- — of the one with regulated food and recreation · yukta = regulated, balanced, appropriate. āhāra = food, intake. vihāra = recreation, movement, leisure. The positive formulation of V16's negative: where V16 said 'not too much, not too little,' V17 says 'regulated' — the active, intentional calibration of both nourishment and rest/play. Recreation (vihāra) is explicitly included as part of the yogic life — rest and play are not opposed to practice; they are part of it.
- yukta-ceṣṭasya karmasu
- — of the one with regulated effort in actions · ceṣṭa = effort, exertion, activity. karmasu = in actions, in work. Regulated effort: not slothful (under-exerting), not obsessive (over-exerting). The karma yoga parallel: right action performed with right energy — neither lethargic nor compulsive. This is the middle path applied to work itself.
- yukta-svapna-avabodhasya yogo bhavati duḥkha-hā
- — with regulated sleep and waking, yoga becomes the destroyer of pain · svapna = sleep. avabodha = waking, awareness. duḥkha-hā = destroyer of suffering (duḥkha = pain/suffering; hā from √han, to destroy/strike). The culminating phrase: when all four rhythms are regulated (food, recreation, effort, sleep/waking), yoga becomes duḥkha-hā — the direct destroyer of suffering. Not merely a technique but a way of life that removes the root conditions of pain.
The positive prescription: for the person whose eating, recreation, work-effort, and sleep-waking cycle are all consciously regulated and balanced — for that person, yoga becomes the direct destroyer of suffering.
A modern analogy
Elite performance science calls this 'periodisation' — the conscious rhythm of intense work and deliberate rest that produces peak performance over time. Athletes who train without proper recovery deteriorate. Those who rest without training stagnate. The periodised approach — regulated effort and regulated rest — produces superhuman results. This verse is the Gita's periodisation principle: regulate all four basic rhythms and yoga (the practice AND the state) destroys your suffering.
What it does NOT mean
This verse does NOT mean a rigid, joyless regime. Recreation (vihāra) is explicitly included — the yogic life makes room for play. What is regulated is the EXCESS — the habitual over- or under-doing that characterises unconscious living.
Take with you
- This verse's four regulations are actionable: (1) food — eat at regular times, appropriate amounts; (2) recreation — schedule genuine leisure, not screen-numbing; (3) work — know your best and worst hours, work in your best hours; (4) sleep/wake — consistent times, sufficient duration.
- The phrase 'duḥkha-hā' (destroyer of suffering) is the promise: regulated life IS the practice. You don't need to add meditation on top of an already chaotic life — regulate the life first. The regulation itself is yoga.
- This verse completes a pair with the one before it: the previous verse warns against extremes (eating, fasting, sleeping, waking too much or too little), and this one prescribes positive regulation. Together they constitute the Gita's lifestyle prescription — the foundation on which all further practice rests.
Public-domain translations (6) compare all →
For one with regulated food and recreation, regulated effort in actions, regulated sleep and waking — yoga becomes the destroyer of pain. [1]
To him who is temperate in eating and recreation, in his effort for work, and in sleep and waking, Yoga becomes the destroyer of pain. [4]
For him who is moderate in food and recreation, moderate in his efforts at work, regulated in sleeping and waking, Yoga destroys all pain. [5]
But the man who is abstemious in eating, in recreation, in sleeping, in waking, and in his actions — for him Yoga is the destroyer of grief. [6]
But for one who is temperate in eating and in rest, in sleeping and waking, in effort for work — Yoga destroys all pain. [7]
Yoga is the destroyer of all pain for him who is always moderate in eating and recreation, moderate in his efforts in actions, and moderate in sleep and wakefulness. [9]
This verse speaks to
Where this thread continues
Yoga fails for those who eat or fast to excess — and equally for those who sleep too much or too little. Regulate.
When the completely controlled mind rests serenely in the Self alone, free from all desire-pull — that is called yoga.
Sāttvic food enhances life, sattva, strength, health, joy, delight — savoury, oleaginous, substantial, heart-pleasing.
Instrument, offering, fire, act, destination — all Brahman. One absorbed in Brahman-action reaches Brahman alone.
Renunciation without yoga is painful to achieve — the yoga-joined muni attains Brahman swiftly.
Greed, restless activity, and longing surge — know that rajas is predominant and karma-saṅga is binding.
Verse 17 of 47 · back to Chapter 6