14th Chapter: Verses 20, 21, 22
Our temperaments are determined by a combination of the three
gunas –
sattva guna, rajo guna and
tamo guna.
Sattva guna is the highest and most sublime. It manifests itself as wisdom and serenity.
Rajo guna manifests itself as dynamism and ambition.
Tamo guna manifests itself as laziness and delusion.
20th verse: “Highest spiritual evolution happens when we transcend the three
gunas. Such a person is called
Guṇātita. He reaches a state where there is no birth, no old age or sickness, and no death. He realizes his true identity as the Atman, which is never born, which never dies, which is not subjected to changes and which is all-pervading. He attains immortality (
amṛitam).”
Those who are endowed with
sattva guna, they will be able to realize that human beings are not just a body-mind complex. There is something beyond that. Our real identity is as
Atman. When we realize this true identity, we can transcend the three
gunas. Then the
gunas will be tools in our hands, not vice versa.
Gita asks us to strive to transcend all the three
gunas. Being established in sattva guna is not enough as there is a risk of descending down to
rajo guna by the force of circumstances. To transcend the three
gunas, we have to get established in sattva guna which promotes physical and emotional well-being and helps us make proper use of
rajo guna.
The difference between a
Guṇātita and the one established in sattva guna is this. The one with sattva guna has the risk of descending down to a level where
rajo guna becomes predominant. The
Guṇātita may come down to the level of
sattva guna, but never to the level to
rajo guna or
tamo guna.
We attain immortality, not in the physical sense, but by realizing our true nature. One cannot transcend death at the physical level. When we realize our true nature and its immortal dimension, we transcend death. We realize that the body is just a cage or instrument for the
Atman to manifest. We realize that everything at the empirical level is non-eternal, there is something beyond that is eternal.
Brihadaranyaka Upanishad has a profound dialogue between
Yajnavalkya and
Maitreyi on the topic of immortality.
In the 21st verse,
Arjuna asks: “What are the characteristics and signs of this
Guṇātita, the one who has transcended the three gunas? How does such a person act and behave? How does one understand that he has gone beyond the three
gunas?”
Gunas are not visible and cannot be physically verified. We can infer which
guna is predominant in a person by observing his external temperament. For example, if a person is active but with a sense of serenity and wisdom, we can infer that he is endowed with
sattva guna.
We can transform our own personality. We have to understand where we stand and start climbing the ladder from
tamo guna to
rajo guna to
sattva guna. If we are lazy, we should first become active to develop
rajo guna. If we are active, we should listen to higher ideas or do noble actions which generate
sattva guna.
In
Gita, there are various references to the characteristics of the person who has reached the highest state of spiritual evolution, such as
Yogi, Guṇātita, Bhakta, Jnani. These characteristics are of the same personality, who has reached the highest level evolving through different channels.
Guṇātita has a number of faculties, he is very efficient, but he is absolutely calm. A
bhakta thinks that whatever he does is God’s will, so he remains