योगस्थः कुरु कर्माणि सङ्गं त्यक्त्वा धनञ्जय ।
सिद्ध्यसिद्ध्योः समो भूत्वा समत्वं योग उच्यते ॥
Bhagavad Gita 2.48
Transliteration:Yogasthaḥ kuru karmāṇi saṅgaṁ tyaktvā dhanañjaya
Siddhy-asiddhyoḥ samo bhūtvā samatvaṁ yoga ucyate
Translation (English):Established in yoga, perform your actions, O Dhananjaya (Arjuna), abandoning attachment, and remaining balanced in success and failure. Such equanimity is called yoga.
A verse for moments when clarity feels distant
Uncertainty has a peculiar way of speeding up the mind. When outcomes are unclear, people often rush decisions simply to escape discomfort. Action begins to feel like relief, even when it lacks direction. In this verse, Krishna offers a radically different response: do not rush to resolve uncertainty; first, learn to stand steady within it.
The instruction begins with the term yogasthaḥ, which translates to ‘established in yoga.’ In this context, yoga does not refer to the physical postures commonly associated with it, but rather denotes a deeper inner state of alignment and composure. Here, Krishna is imparting crucial wisdom to Arjuna by emphasizing that decisions made in a state of agitation are seldom wise or prudent. Therefore, it is imperative that one first stabilizes the mind and attains a sense of calm before taking any action.
This teaching feels especially relevant today, when urgency is often mistaken for intelligence. Quick reactions are rewarded, immediate answers expected, and hesitation seen as weakness. Yet the Gita quietly reminds us that clarity rarely emerges from panic; it grows from steadiness.
What it means to act without rushing
Krishna does not advise withdrawal or indecision. He says, kuru karmāṇi, perform your actions. Life still demands participation. Responsibilities remain. Choices must eventually be made. But the quality of action matters more than its speed.
When decisions are made out of fear, such as the fear of missing out, the fear of failure, or even the fear of uncertainty itself, they frequently lead to greater confusion down the line. Conversely, making choices from a place of balance enables your perspective to expand. You start to become aware of subtle differences rather than succumbing to external pressures. Moving slowly on the inside does not imply that one is also moving slowly on the outside. It signifies the importance of allowing your thoughts, emotions, and intentions to settle and clarify before firmly committing to a particular path.
Letting go of attachment to outcomes
The phrase saṅgaṁ tyaktvā, “abandon attachment”, addresses the root cause of impulsive decisions. Most rushing happens because we are emotionally attached to a specific outcome. We want certainty now. We want reassurance immediately. The mind pushes for closure even when understanding is incomplete.
Krishna’s guidance is subtle: release the emotional demand for guaranteed results. When attachment loosens, patience naturally increases. You become willing to observe, reflect, and wait for better timing rather than forcing resolution. This does not reduce ambition; it refines it. You still care about outcomes, but they no longer dictate your mental stability.
Balance between success and failure
The verse continues: siddhy-asiddhyoḥ samo bhūtvā, remain equal in success and failure. At first glance, this seems idealistic. How can one feel the same about opposite results? Krishna is not denying human emotion. Instead, he is pointing toward emotional resilience. When the mind is excessively invested in success, it fears failure intensely. That fear accelerates decision-making, pushing individuals toward premature conclusions simply to avoid loss. Equanimity removes this pressure. When both success and failure are seen as temporary outcomes rather than personal verdicts, decision-making becomes clearer. You are free to choose wisely rather than urgently.
Why equanimity is called yoga
Krishna concludes with a powerful definition: samatvaṁ yoga ucyate, equanimity itself is yoga. This reframes spirituality entirely. Yoga is not escape from life but balance within action.
During times of uncertainty, the human mind often swings between the extremes of overthinking and acting on impulse. Equanimity steps in to disrupt this cycle of confusion. It provides a crucial pause—one that is not a state of paralysis but instead fosters a sense of presence. Within this moment of stillness, our intuition becomes sharper and our perception clearer. Many of the regrets we carry throughout life do not stem from misguided intentions but rather result from poorly timed decisions. Choices made amidst emotional turbulence frequently overlook insights that a calmer state of mind would easily recognize and understand.
Applying this wisdom in everyday uncertainty
Whether facing career choices, relationship crossroads, or personal transitions, this verse encourages a simple but transformative practice: stabilise before deciding. Pause long enough to separate urgency from necessity. Observe your emotional state. Ask whether the impulse to act comes from clarity or discomfort. Often, uncertainty itself is not the problem; resistance to uncertainty is. When the mind stops demanding immediate certainty, patience becomes possible. And within patience, insight quietly appears.
Krishna’s teaching does not promise that uncertainty will disappear. Instead, it offers something more valuable: the ability to move through uncertainty without anxiety dictating direction. Act, but from steadiness. Decide, but without inner haste. In that calm balance between action and acceptance lies the kind of wisdom that turns uncertainty from an obstacle into a teacher.