Chapter 14, Verse 10
रजस्तमश्चाभिभूय सत्त्वं भवति भारत | रजः सत्त्वं तमश्चैव तमः सत्त्वं रजस्तथा ||१४-१०||
rajastamaścābhibhūya sattvaṃ bhavati bhārata . rajaḥ sattvaṃ tamaścaiva tamaḥ sattvaṃ rajastathā ||14-10||
Meaning
14.10 Now Sattva arises (prevails), O Arjuna, having overpowered Rajas and Tamas; nor Rajas, having overpowered Sattva and Tamas; and now Tamas, having overpowered Sattva and Rajas.
Word-by-Word Meaning
Explanation & Commentary
Krishna reveals that the three guṇas are never static; they are in constant flux, each rising and falling as it momentarily overpowers the other two. At one hour sattva crests and the mind is clear and calm; at another rajas surges and we are swept into striving; at yet another tamas thickens and we sink into dullness. No one is permanently 'a sattvic person' or 'a tamasic person' — the mixture shifts from moment to moment.
This insight is profoundly freeing. It means our worst states are not our fixed identity but passing weather. A dark, heedless mood is tamas temporarily dominant, not a verdict on the soul. And it counsels humility about our finest states too, since rajas or tamas may rise again. The wise response is to observe the shifting guṇas as a witness, neither boasting of clarity nor despairing in dullness, knowing the Self stands behind all three.
💡 Key Takeaway
Your states of mind are passing weather, not permanent identity — so neither cling to the bright ones nor despair in the dark.
Related Verses
सत्त्वं रजस्तम इति गुणाः प्रकृतिसम्भवाः | निबध्नन्ति महाबाहो देहे देहिनमव्ययम् ||१४-५||
sattvaṃ rajastama iti guṇāḥ prakṛtisambhavāḥ . nibadhnanti mahābāho dehe dehinamavyayam ||14-5||
14.5 Purity, passion and inertia these alities, O Arjuna, born of Nature, bind fast in the body, the embodied, the indestructible.
तत्र सत्त्वं निर्मलत्वात्प्रकाशकमनामयम् | सुखसङ्गेन बध्नाति ज्ञानसङ्गेन चानघ ||१४-६||
tatra sattvaṃ nirmalatvātprakāśakamanāmayam . sukhasaṅgena badhnāti jñānasaṅgena cānagha ||14-6||
14.6 Of these, Sattva, which from its stainlessness is luminous and healthy, binds by attachment to happiness and by attachment to knowledge, O sinless one.
रजो रागात्मकं विद्धि तृष्णासङ्गसमुद्भवम् | तन्निबध्नाति कौन्तेय कर्मसङ्गेन देहिनम् ||१४-७||
rajo rāgātmakaṃ viddhi tṛṣṇāsaṅgasamudbhavam . tannibadhnāti kaunteya karmasaṅgena dehinam ||14-7||
14.7 Know thou Rajas to be of the nature of passion, the source of thirst (for sensual enjoyment) and attachment; it binds fast, O Arjuna, the embodied one by attachment to action.