Bhagavad Gita Lesson: Have you ever asked yourself, “Why do I always think more than others?” If someone’s tone changes, then you feel, “I am fine” see restlessness in the eyes of the person, remember everyone’s birthday, first message, but in return the same depth is not available. Seeing all this, the question arises in the mind, do I care a lot?
Where the world says “Think less”, the Bhagavad Gita says something else. The Gita does not teach us to feel less, rather it teaches how to feel right without losing ourselves. She shows how much true strength it takes to care and how to play it without losing strength.
Krishna says to Arjuna that the more a person is more conscious, the more deeply he feels – the feelings of their and others. The pain of others is visible because your soul is sensitive. It is not to be emotional, the beginning of intelligence. But with this it is necessary to know what to let go inside and what not.
You can love, but when your peace rests on what the other gives, it becomes love, not love. Krishna explains that this attachment becomes the root cause of sorrow. If you care and do not do the same, then your feeling is not meaningless. He is yours, and this makes it valuable.
The Gita teaches that every person has his own religion, his way, his learning. You feel more because perhaps your soul has come to learn in this birth, how to feel deeply, but without broken. Reduced sensitivity of someone else does not make your excess wrong.
Krishna never says to erase himself. They say, do deeds with balance. If you always take initiative first, take time out for everyone, then it does not mean that you are “too much”. Perhaps you are just putting energy in those who have come empty handed themselves.
When Arjuna breaks down, Krishna does not let them chant, but shows them a big view. We often get tired because we hold those things that do not happen to us. Leaving is not to leave a care, but to hold a grip on the result.
You care more because the world needs people who ask, answer, and understand the feelings. But such souls should also come to take care of themselves. Love, but don’t lose yourself. Like Krishna taught it like burning, but do not become ashes.