Bhagavad Gītā Chapter 6, Verse 11: Krishna to Arjuna — Dhyāna-Yoga
In a clean place, set up your own firm seat, neither too high nor too low, layered with cloth over hide over kusha grass.
Bhāṣyakāra purports
- Śaṅkaraadvaita
One should establish for oneself a firm, unmoving seat in a place that is śuci (pure) — whether pure by nature or by ritual preparation — neither excessively elevated nor low, the kuśa-grass layer receiving the skin above it and cloth above that. Śaṅkara notes the physical sequence runs counter to the recitation order: kuśa first, then ajina, then caila atop. The āsana-niyama is purely preparatory; what matters is the stillness that the stable seat occasions for the antaḥkaraṇa (inner instrument) already turned toward ātma-vicāra (inquiry into the self).
divergence: Advaita treats the seat preparation as functional infrastructure for jñāna; the physical details are neither symbolically loaded nor devotionally significant in themselves.
- Rāmānujaviśiṣṭādvaita
Let the yogin seat himself on a support made of wood or other material, spread with kuśa, skin, and cloth, in a place not merely swept clean but positively uncontaminated — not touched by aśuci (impure) persons, not occupied by aśuci objects, purified in the full Vaiṣṇava sense. Rāmānuja specifies 'sāpāśraye' — the seat must have a backing-support — and insists the arrangement must be manah-prasādakara (conducive to mental clarity and peace). This physical purification is not incidental: it is the opening act of kainkarya (service), preparing the field in which the jīva, fully collected in cit and body, can turn toward ātma-darśana for the sake of liberation from bondage.
divergence: Where Śaṅkara's purity is metaphysical or ritual, Rāmānuja's is social-relational and telic — the pure seat serves the jīva's orientation toward Bhagavān.
- Madhvadvaita
The yogin establishes the āsana as the first external act of samādhi-yoga, subordinating mind (ātmā here = manaḥ, Madhva glosses) to the discipline of Hari's worship. The seat itself is not elaborated at length in Madhva's compact tīkā — his focus pivots immediately to the inner act: 'yuñjīta samādhi-yoga-yuktaṃ kuryāt' (let him make himself disposed to the union that is samādhi). Physical arrangement is a dependent condition, not an independent subject; what counts is the jīva's radical ontological dependence (pāratantryam) on Hari expressed through disciplined posture.
divergence: Madhva is conspicuously terse here; the physical seat-details are minimized in favor of the metaphysical structure of samādhi as Hari-directed act. Bhāṣya coverage is sparse — flagged honestly.
- Vallabhaśuddhādvaita
*Śucau deśe pratiṣṭhāpya sthiram āsanam ātmanaḥ* — the aspirant establishes a firm seat in a pure place, neither too high nor too low, layered with *caila* (cloth), *ajina* (hide), and *kuśa* (sacred grass). In *śuddhādvaita*, this physical preparation is not mere discipline but a real participation in Kṛṣṇa's *puṣṭi* (sustaining grace): the body, the place, and the layered seat all belong to Brahman's own non-illusory self-expression. There is no *māyā* to dissolve the reality of *kuśa* or *ajina*; the arrangement is Kṛṣṇa's own provision, received by the *jīva* as an instance of *puṣṭi-mārga* (the path of grace). The purity of the ground — *śucau deśe* — is not merely ritual fitness; it is the suitability of a locus already permeated by Kṛṣṇa as *antaryāmin*, the inner sustainer whose *śakti* moves the devotee from within even before meditation begins. Firmness of the seat (*sthiram āsanam*) reflects the *yogī*'s entire svarūpa: held steady not by self-effort alone but by the Lord's *prasāda*. The three-layered base ascends from *kuśa* to hide to cloth — an outer image of the interior ascent toward *yogārūḍha*-svarūpa, each layer real, each a gift within *brahma-sambandha* (the devotee's consecrated relation to Brahman).
divergence: Vallabha's extant bhāṣya treats 6.10–6.13 as a continuous unit focused on the *yogī yuñjānaḥ rahasi sthitaḥ* arc; the seat-details of 6.11 are not isolated. The reading here derives the *śuddhādvaita* siddhānta directly from the mūla, consistent with Vallabha's *puṣṭi-mārga* and the non-illusory status of all material elements within Brahman's self-manifestation.
- Śrīdharabhakti
Śrīdhara opens with a technical heading — 'āsana-niyamaṃ darśayan āha śucāv iti dvābhyām' (the āsana-rule is shown in these two verses) — signaling that 6.11–12 form a paired unit. The seat is ācala (unmoving), neither too high nor too low; the layering is kuśa at base, then caila (cloth/textile), then ajina (skin of tiger or similar animal) above. The physical arrangement maps the meditator's graduated withdrawal: gross external surface upward to the subtler material nearest the body, a somatic symbol of the inner ascent from sthūla to sūkṣma. Bhakti here is philologically precise first, then devotionally resonant.
divergence: Śrīdhara's gloss is free of HTML/JS artifacts in the supplied payload; Sanskrit content is clean and used directly.
- Madhusūdanaadvaita-bhakti
Madhusūdana brings the fullest physical imagination of any commentator here: the śuci deśa is not merely clean but specifically jana-samudāya-rahita (free of crowds) and nirbhaya (free of fear) — he names Gaṅgā riverbanks and caves as exemplary. The seat should be pratiṣṭhāpya for oneself (ātmanaḥ), explicitly to exclude another's seat, because using another's āsana introduces yoga-vikṣepa (disruption of yoga). He then cites Patañjali — 'sthira-sukham āsanam' — as corroboration, integrating Yoga-Sūtra authority into the Gītā commentary. The mṛdu-caila, the ajina, and the kuśa are arranged from the ground up: kuśa-mayī-bṛsi, then mṛdu-carma, then mṛdu-vastra — an ascending gradient of softness and warmth that coaxes the body toward the stillness the antaḥkaraṇa requires.
divergence: Madhusūdana is the most integrative: he synthesizes Advaita purity-logic, Bhakti-inflected solitude, and Pātañjala āsana-theory in a single commentary unit.