Vairagya · Lesson 2

The Collapse

क्रोधाद्भवति सम्मोहः सम्मोहात्स्मृतिविभ्रमः

From anger comes delusion, and from delusion loss of memory. From loss of memory comes the ruin of discrimination, and from the ruin of discrimination he perishes.

Chapter 2, Verse 63 · tr. Swami Swarupananda (1909)

You’ve seen it happen. Maybe you’ve lived it. A small slight at work — someone takes credit for your idea. You stew on it. The anger builds. By the time you get home, you’ve rewritten the entire narrative. Your boss is a villain. The company doesn’t value you. Nothing matters.

Then you say something you can’t take back. Quit impulsively. Send the 2 AM message. Burn the bridge.

Krishna describes this with surgical precision. Anger doesn’t just make you do dumb things — it deludes you. You literally forget who you are, what you value, what you’ve worked for. Your memory of what actually matters gets scrambled. And without that compass, your intelligence — your ability to choose wisely — collapses.

This is the full chain from the previous verse, played to its end. Contemplation to attachment to desire to anger to delusion to amnesia to destruction.

Every breakup fight that escalated past the point of repair followed this sequence. Every career implosion. Every friendship torched over a misunderstanding that nobody paused to clarify.

The verse isn’t moralizing. It’s describing physics. This is what happens when you let the chain run.

Reflect

Think of a time anger made you forget what you actually cared about. What was the real cost?

Quick Check

According to this verse, what happens after anger takes hold?

What does this mean for your life today?

Take a moment to bridge the distance between the verse and your reality. Your notes are saved locally to your device and never sent anywhere.

Close The Lesson

Pause before you move on.

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Carry this one into your next decision before you rush to the next idea.

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