Bhagavad Gītā Chapter 6, Verse 11: Krishna to ArjunaDhyāna-Yoga

Bhagavad Gītā 6.11Chapter 6 · Dhyāna-Yoga · KrishnaArjuna · anuṣṭubh
शुचौ देशे प्रतिष्ठाप्य स्थिरमासनमात्मनः
नात्युच्छ्रितं नातिनीचं चैलाजिनकुशोत्तरम्
śucauśuci(3 verses)locative masculine singular nounpure, clean, brightattested in commentariesadvaitaशुद्धे विविक्ते स्वभावतः संस्कारतो वा देशे स्थाने प्रतिष्ठाप्य स्थिरम् अचलम् आत्मनः आसनं नात्युच्छ्रितं नातीवउच्छ्रितंviśiṣṭādvaitaदेशे अशुचिभिः पुरुषैः अनधिष्ठिते अपरिगृहीतेadvaita-bhaktiस्वभावतः संस्कारतो वा शुद्धे जनसमुदायरहित निर्भये गङ्गातटगुहादौ देशे समे स्थाने प्रतिष्ठाप्य स्थिरं निश्चलं नात्युच्छ्र deśedeśa(5 verses)locative masculine singular nounplace, region, countryattested in commentariesadvaitaस्थाने प्रतिष्ठाप्य स्थिरम् अचलम् आत्मनः आसनं नात्युच्छ्रितं नातीवउच्छ्रितं नviśiṣṭādvaitaअशुचिभिः पुरुषैः अनधिष्ठिते अपरिगृहीतेadvaita-bhaktiसमे स्थाने प्रतिष्ठाप्य स्थिरं निश्चलं नात्युच्छ्रितं नात्युच्चं नाप्यतिनीचं चैलाजिनकुशोत्तरं चैलं मृदु वस्त्रं अजिनं व pratiṣṭhāpyapratiṣṭhāpay(2 verses)convto establish, set up (caus. of prati- + √sthā)attested in commentariesadvaitaस्थिरम् अचलम् आत्मनः आसनं नात्युच्छ्रितं नातीवउच्छ्रितं नviśiṣṭādvaitaदृढं स्थापयित्वाadvaita-bhaktiस्थिरं निश्चलं नात्युच्छ्रितं नात्युच्चं नाप्यतिनीचं चैलाजिनकुशोत्तरं चैलं मृदु वस्त्रं अजिनं व्याघ्रादिचर्म ते कुशेभ्य sthiramsthira(7 verses)accusative neuter singular nounfirm, steady, fixedattested in commentariesadvaitaअचलम् आत्मनः आसनं नात्युच्छ्रितं नातीवउच्छ्रितं न āsanamāsana(3 verses)accusative neuter singular nounseat, posture (from √ās 'sit') ātmanaḥātman(114 verses)genitive masculine singular nounthe Self, soul; one's own selfattested in commentariesadvaitaआसनं नात्युच्छ्रितं नातीवउच्छ्रितं नbhaktiस्वस्यासनं स्थापयित्वा
nātyucchritaṃ√ucchriaccusative neuter singular participle nounto raise up, erect (ud- + √śri) nātinīcaṃ cailājinana(252 verses)not (negation particle)-kuśkuśacompound (compound member)kuśa-grass (sacred grass)ottaram
spokensingle-voice recital; rendered via IndicF5 conditioned on a Sanskrit reference clip
meaning

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.

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