Yoga · Lesson 5

Beyond Sorrow

सुखमात्यन्तिकं यत्तद्बुद्धिग्राह्यमतीन्द्रियम्

In that state, one experiences infinite happiness that is perceived by the purified intellect and is beyond the reach of the senses — established thus, one never departs from truth.

Chapter 6, Verse 21

There are two kinds of happiness. The first is sensory — a good meal, a warm bath, your favourite song. It’s real, but it’s temporary. The moment the stimulus stops, the happiness fades.

The second kind is what Krishna describes here: a happiness that doesn’t depend on any input. It’s not triggered by something you see, hear, taste, or touch. It comes from the inside, perceived only when the mind is clear enough to notice it.

This sounds mystical, but think about it practically. Have you ever been so absorbed in a creative task that you forgot to eat? That flow state — where time disappears and you feel complete — isn’t coming from your senses. It’s coming from alignment. Your mind, your attention, and your action are unified.

Krishna says this state is “beyond the senses” not because you need to reject pleasure, but because this happiness is in a different category altogether. Sensory happiness is like a candle. This is like the sun — it doesn’t flicker when someone opens a window.

The catch: you can’t chase it the way you chase sensory pleasure. It shows up when you stop chasing. When the mind is still, clear, and not grasping at anything — that’s when the deeper happiness reveals itself. It was always there. You were just too busy to notice.

Reflect

Think about a recent moment of deep contentment — not excitement, but quiet fulfilment. Was it triggered by something external, or did it come from within?

Quick Check

What kind of happiness does Krishna describe here?

Close The Lesson

Pause before you move on.

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Carry this one into your next decision before you rush to the next idea.

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