---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: N Sekar <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Feb 24, 2026, 9:10 PM
Subject: Fwd on B G
To: Kerala Iyer <[email protected]>, Narayanaswamy Sekar <
[email protected]>, Suryanarayana Ambadipudi <[email protected]>,
Rangarajan T.N.C. <[email protected]>, Chittanandam V. R. <
[email protected]>, Mathangi K. Kumar <[email protected]>,
Mani APS <[email protected]>, Rama (Iyer 123 Group) <[email protected]>,
Srinivasan Sridharan <[email protected]>, Surendra Varma <
[email protected]>



An experiment at one of India’s most elite engineering colleges changed how
scientists look at the Bhagavad Gita.

There is a college in India called BITS Pilani where getting admitted is
harder than getting into most Ivy League schools. The students there are
trained to think in equations and evidence.

Between 2012 and 2019, over 2,000 of them signed up for an elective course
on the Bhagavad Gita. Nobody forced them. Nobody had to. The results were
so consistent that it became a peer-reviewed study published on PubMed
Central, the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

300 of those students voluntarily wrote about what changed. Clarity of
thought. A shift in attitude. Better ability to handle pressure. Sharper
decision-making. These are not the kind of things you expect a 5,000 year
old text to deliver to engineering students. But that is exactly what
happened. Across twelve batches. Over seven years. The same result showing
up again and again.

Here is what makes it interesting. These students are trained to be
skeptical. They do not take things at face value. Yet batch after batch
reported the same thing. An inner calm that helped them stay focused. A
framework for thinking that nothing else in their curriculum had offered.
When skeptics arrive at the same conclusion independently over seven years,
that is not anecdote. That is a pattern.

Most people think the Bhagavad Gita is a religious text. It is not. It is a
conversation between a man who is paralyzed by anxiety and someone who
teaches him how to think clearly anyway. Krishna does not tell Arjuna what
to believe. He teaches him how to act when everything feels impossible.
That distinction matters. It is the difference between a prayer book and an
operating manual.

There is a concept in the Gita called Nishkama Karma. It means doing your
work without being consumed by what happens next. That sounds like
philosophy until you realize that modern Cognitive Behavioral Therapy is
trying to teach people the exact same thing. Detach from outcomes. Focus on
process. Manage your response to what you cannot control. The Gita had this
figured out a few thousand years before therapists started charging for it.

During COVID, researchers ran a clinical trial on healthcare workers.
Frontline doctors and nurses drowning in stress. One group learned Bhagavad
Gita teachings. The control group did not. The Gita group showed
statistically significant reductions in anxiety. And here is the part that
stopped me. The effects were still holding strong 45 days after the
intervention ended. Most stress management techniques fade within a week.
This one stuck.

The Bhagavad Gita was written on a battlefield for a man standing in the
worst moment of his life. It was not written for temples or retirement. It
was written for the moments when your mind is falling apart and you need
something that actually works. 2,000 of India’s sharpest minds found that
it did. The only real question is why most people will still never open it.

Follow @10minutegita for more such updates.
Yahoo Mail: Search, Organize, Conquer
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