This interactive worksheet helps you honestly assess where you are in your practice of Vairagya as taught in the Bhagavad Gita. It combines self-rating scales with open-ended reflection questions to give you a complete picture of your current understanding and practice. Your responses are saved in your browser, so you can return and update them over time. Consider retaking this assessment monthly to track your growth.
Self-Assessment: Where Are You with Vairagya?
1. I have a clear understanding of what vairagya means in the context of the Bhagavad Gita.
Based on BG 2.47
2. I actively practice letting go in my daily life.
Based on BG 2.48
3. I find it easy to apply the principle of vairagya when facing attachment to outcomes.
4. I can explain the Gita's teaching on vairagya to someone else in simple terms.
5. I regularly read or contemplate Gita verses related to vairagya.
Based on BG 2.55
6. I notice a positive change in my response to fear of loss since studying vairagya.
Based on BG 2.56
7. I understand how vairagya connects to other Gita teachings like Karma Yoga and Shanti.
8. I feel confident integrating renunciation into my professional and personal life.
Reflection: Vairagya in Your Life
1. Describe a recent situation where you struggled with attachment to outcomes. How did you respond, and how might the Gita's teaching change your response?
Based on BG 2.47
2. What does letting go look like in practice for you? Give a specific example from the past week.
Based on BG 2.48
3. What is your biggest obstacle to practicing vairagya consistently? What internal or external factors contribute to this obstacle, and what would help you overcome it?
4. How has your understanding of vairagya changed since you started studying the Gita? Compare your current perspective to where you were when you first encountered this teaching.
5. Think of a person you admire who embodies vairagya. What specific behaviors or attitudes of theirs reflect this teaching? How might you adapt their approach to your own life?
6. The Gita teaches that equanimity requires both knowledge and practice. Where do you feel stronger — in understanding the concept or applying it? What would help you develop the weaker area?
Based on BG 2.55
Action Planning: Growing in Vairagya
1. List three specific actions you will take this week to deepen your practice of vairagya. Include a specific day and time for each action.
2. Which verse on vairagya resonates with you most right now? Write it out and explain why it speaks to your current life situation.
Based on BG 2.47
3. Who in your life models vairagya well? What can you learn from them, and how will you seek their guidance or example this week?
4. What is one habit you would like to develop that embodies the Gita's teaching on vairagya? Describe the habit, when you will practice it, and how you will track your consistency.
5. Write a commitment statement: In one paragraph, describe how you intend to integrate vairagya into your life over the next 30 days. Be specific about what you will do differently.
Based on BG 15.4
How to Score
For the self-assessment section, add up your scores (1 = Strongly Disagree to 5 = Strongly Agree). Total possible: 25. Score 20-25: Strong foundation — focus on deepening subtleties. Score 13-19: Growing practice — consistent daily effort will accelerate progress. Score 5-12: Beginning stage — start with one key verse and build from there. Remember, honest self-assessment is itself a practice of vairagya.
Understanding Your Results
Your scores reflect a snapshot, not a fixed state. The Bhagavad Gita teaches that spiritual growth is a continuous journey. A low score is not a failure but an honest starting point. Use your reflection answers to identify specific areas for growth. The most important insight is not your score but the patterns you notice in your responses — recurring challenges, emerging strengths, and areas where you feel pulled to go deeper.
Why Vairagya Matters in the Bhagavad Gita
The Bhagavad Gita's teaching on Vairagya is among its most practical and widely applicable wisdom. Set against the backdrop of Arjuna's crisis on the battlefield of Kurukshetra, this teaching addresses the universal human struggle with attachment to outcomes and fear of loss. Krishna does not offer mere philosophy — he provides a framework for action that has guided seekers for over five thousand years.
In the modern world, the relevance of vairagya has only grown. Whether you are dealing with attachment to outcomes, seeking clarity about fear of loss, or working to develop letting go, the Gita's teaching provides tested, reliable guidance. The verses in chapters 2, 5, 12, 15 lay out a progressive path from understanding to practice to mastery.
What makes the Gita's approach distinctive is its emphasis on integration. Rather than requiring withdrawal from the world, Krishna teaches Arjuna — a warrior, a family man, a person with real-world responsibilities — how to practice vairagya right in the middle of daily life. This makes the teaching accessible to students, professionals, parents, and seekers of all backgrounds.
Key Concepts in Vairagya
The Gita's teaching on Vairagya encompasses several interconnected concepts that work together to form a complete path of practice:
- Letting go: This aspect of vairagya teaches us how to approach attachment to outcomes with wisdom and equanimity. Understanding letting go is essential for putting the Gita's broader teaching into practice.
- Renunciation: This aspect of vairagya teaches us how to approach fear of loss with wisdom and equanimity. Understanding renunciation is essential for putting the Gita's broader teaching into practice.
- Equanimity: This aspect of vairagya teaches us how to approach possessiveness with wisdom and equanimity. Understanding equanimity is essential for putting the Gita's broader teaching into practice.
- Beyond pleasure pain: This aspect of vairagya teaches us how to approach inability to let go with wisdom and equanimity. Understanding beyond pleasure pain is essential for putting the Gita's broader teaching into practice.
- Material vs spiritual: This aspect of vairagya teaches us how to approach material dissatisfaction with wisdom and equanimity. Understanding material vs spiritual is essential for putting the Gita's broader teaching into practice.
Each of these concepts builds on the others. As you study and practice them, you will notice how understanding one naturally deepens your grasp of the rest. The Srimad Gita App provides detailed commentary on each of these themes, allowing you to explore them at your own pace.
How to Begin Practicing Vairagya
Starting a practice of vairagya does not require any special background or preparation. The Gita teaches that every person, regardless of their current situation, can begin right where they are. Here is a simple approach to getting started:
Step 1: Read the key verses. Begin with BG 2.47 and BG 2.48. Read them slowly and reflectively, using the Srimad Gita App for multiple translations and audio pronunciation of the Sanskrit.
Step 2: Choose one principle to practice. Rather than trying to implement everything at once, select one aspect of vairagya — such as letting go — and focus on it for a full week.
Step 3: Observe and reflect. Throughout your day, notice moments where the teaching is relevant. In the evening, spend a few minutes journaling about what you observed. This reflective practice accelerates understanding.
Step 4: Deepen gradually. After your first week, add another dimension of the teaching. Over time, your practice of vairagya will become more natural and integrated into your daily life.
The Bhagavad Gita's Context for Vairagya
The Bhagavad Gita, often called simply "the Gita," is a 700-verse scripture that forms part of the ancient Indian epic Mahabharata. Set on the battlefield of Kurukshetra, it records the dialogue between Prince Arjuna and his charioteer Lord Krishna, who reveals himself to be the Supreme Divine. The teaching on vairagya emerges directly from Arjuna's real-life crisis — facing a battle where his own relatives and teachers stand on the opposing side.
This setting is significant because it means the Gita's wisdom on vairagya was not given in a monastery or ashram, but in the most intense, high-stakes situation imaginable. Krishna's teaching is designed for people engaged in the world, not withdrawn from it. When he speaks about letting go, he is addressing someone who must act immediately and decisively.
The classical commentators who have shaped our understanding of the Gita's teaching on vairagya include Adi Shankaracharya (8th century), who founded the Advaita Vedanta school and emphasized non-dual knowledge; Ramanujacharya (11th century), who established Vishishtadvaita and highlighted qualified non-dualism with devotion; and Madhvacharya (13th century), who taught Dvaita or dualistic devotion. Each of these masters brought a unique lens to the same verses, and studying their perspectives enriches understanding immensely. The Srimad Gita App includes commentary references from these traditions.
Related Bhagavad Gita Teachings
Vairagya connects deeply with several other important Gita themes. Exploring these related teachings will enrich your understanding and provide multiple perspectives on the spiritual path:
- Karma Yoga — The path of selfless action and performing duty without attachment to results
- Shanti — Achieving mental calm, emotional balance, and lasting inner peace
- Letting Go & Moving On — Wisdom for releasing the past, overcoming regret, and embracing change
- Equanimity — Maintaining balanced mind in success and failure, pleasure and pain
The Bhagavad Gita's genius is in showing how all these teachings converge toward the same goal of self-realization, inner peace, and liberation. By studying vairagya alongside these related themes, you develop a comprehensive understanding that supports genuine spiritual growth.