Ram Dass – Here and Now – Ep. 195 – Essential Teachings from the Gita w/ Alan Watts

In this special episode of Here and Now, Ram Dass and Alan Watts offer their thoughts on some of the essential teachings from the Bhagavad Gita and how we can apply them to everyday life.

In this special episode of Here and Now, Ram Dass and Alan Watts offer their thoughts on some of the essential teachings from the Bhagavad Gita and how we can apply them to everyday life.

The Inner Battlefield

This episode begins with a recording of Ram Dass from his 1974 Naropa University course entitled, ‘Yogas of the Bhagavad Gita.’ He talks about how the Gita is a vehicle for becoming conscious, and how he understands that teaching this course is working on himself. Ram Dass suggests different ways of reading the Gita and offers a few words about the application of the Gita in everyday life.

“At a symbolic level, what the Gita is, is a dialogue between God and the seeker. And the battlefield turns out to be the inner battlefield, the battlefield of our own evolutionary being.” – Ram Dass

Ram Dass illuminates the path of awakening in Here and Now Ep. 164
Essential Teachings from the Gita (14:15)

The next part of this episode is a recording from one of Alan Watts’ early radio talks. Alan begins with a general introduction of the Bhagavad Gita and reads a selection from the first chapter. He talks about the concept of Brahman and how it relates to the essential teachings of the Gita. Alan digs into the doctrine of rebirth and how the idea of reincarnation is often misunderstood in the West.

“The essential teaching which the Gita is trying to convey is that the real center and soul, the basic reality of you and I, is not the superficial consciousness which we ordinarily call, ‘myself.’ What we are, fundamentally, is this unthinkable source of life and existence named Brahman, the expansive.” – Alan Watts

Don’t miss out on Alan Watts Being in the Way podcast on the Be Here Now Network. Being in the Way offers unique selections from the Alan Watts Archive’s collection, including recordings not heard in 40 years.

Root and Ground (30:18)

Alan continues his talk by reading more passages from the Bhagavad Gita. He explores the story, which takes place on a battlefield, in relation to Gandhi and the concept of non-violence. He talks about Krishna’s principle of action, which is to act without any attachments to the fruits of action. Alan wraps things up by talking about why a free being must be an unmotivated being.

“The root and ground of our soul and mind is the same as the root and ground of this whole universe.” – Alan Watts

Jack Kornfield talks about what it means to have the heart of an impeccable warrior in Heart Wisdom Ep. 131