Bhagavad Gita 14.15: Departing when rajas is predominant, one is born among those attached to action. Departing in tamas, one is born in deluded wombs.

BG 14.15 , Departing when rajas is predominant, one is born among those attached to action. Departing in tamas, one is born in deluded wombs.. Sanskrit, translation, and deep reflection. Study the three gunas verse by verse with GitaPath.

BHAGAVAD GITA 14.15

rajasi pralayam gatva karma-sangishu jayate tatha pralinas tamasi mudha-yonishu jayate

Departing when rajas is predominant, one is born among those attached to action. Departing in tamas, one is born in deluded wombs.

Rajas at death leads to rebirth in environments of ambition and activity. Tamas at death leads to lower births in confusion and darkness. The gunas shape not just this life but the trajectory of consciousness across lives.

Understanding Bhagavad Gita 14.15

Bhagavad Gita 14.15 is part of Chapter 14, Gunatraya Vibhaga Yoga: the yoga of the three qualities of nature. The verse teaches: Rajas at death leads to rebirth in environments of ambition and activity. Tamas at death leads to lower births in confusion and darkness. The gunas shape not just this life but the trajectory of consciousness across lives. The three gunas, sattva, rajas, and tamas, are not abstractions. They are the actual forces shaping every thought you have, every action you take, and every mood you move through. Understanding them is understanding yourself.

Study the Bhagavad Gita verse by verse with audio, reflection, and guided inquiry.

The Three Gunas in Daily Life

Sattva shows up as clarity, generosity, and insight. Rajas shows up as ambition, craving, and restlessness. Tamas shows up as inertia, confusion, and avoidance. Verse 14.15 adds its particular insight to this map. Reading it alongside the surrounding verses of Chapter 14 on GitaPath reveals the full picture.

From Understanding to Practice

Chapter 14’s teaching becomes powerful when it moves from the page into daily observation. The practice is simple: several times a day, pause and ask which guna is most active right now. Not to judge or change it, but simply to see. That seeing creates the distance between experience and identification that is the beginning of freedom. Verse 14.15 gives you one more tool for that seeing.

The gunas lose their grip when you see them clearly. GitaPath makes that seeing a daily practice.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the meaning of Bhagavad Gita 14.15?

BG 14.15 teaches: Rajas at death leads to rebirth in environments of ambition and activity. Tamas at death leads to lower births in confusion and darkness. The gunas shape not just this life but the trajectory of consciousness across lives. It is part of Chapter 14, Gunatraya Vibhaga Yoga, the yoga of understanding the three qualities of nature.

How does understanding the gunas help in daily life?

Recognizing which guna is dominant in any moment, whether sattva (clarity), rajas (drive), or tamas (inertia), gives you the ability to respond wisely rather than react automatically. Verse 14.15 adds one more facet to this self-knowledge.

Can I understand the three gunas without prior study?

Yes. GitaPath presents each verse with practical context so that the guna framework becomes immediately applicable regardless of background.

What is the context of BG 14.15 in Chapter 14?

Chapter 14 systematically describes sattva, rajas, and tamas: how they arise, how they bind, and how the wise person transcends them. Verse 14.15 is one piece of this complete picture.

How does GitaPath help me work with the gunas?

GitaPath offers daily reflection prompts that help you identify which guna is most active right now, building the discriminative awareness that is the heart of Chapter 14’s teaching.

Transcend the gunas not by suppressing them but by seeing through them. Start with GitaPath.

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