The Gita Doesn’t Say 'Never Leave', It Says 'Know When to Surrender'

 

The Gita Doesn’t Say 'Never Leave', It Says 'Know When to Surrender'

There’s a moment in life—maybe many—when everything in you wants to walk away. From the argument that won’t end. From the job that’s draining your soul. From the relationship that feels more like survival than love. But then comes the guilt. The voice in your head—or maybe it’s your upbringing, your family, or the million WhatsApp forwards about "never giving up"—that whispers: Stay. Try harder. Good people don’t quit. We’ve all heard it. And many of us have believed it. But the Gita, in its quiet and eternal wisdom, offers something radically different. It doesn’t tell you to stay and suffer in silence. It tells you to understand, and then choose. And sometimes, the most courageous, spiritual thing you can do—is to walk away with clarity, not regret.

We Think Staying Is Strength. But So Is Leaving

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Guilt That Eats You Alive: How the Bhagavad Gita Teaches Self-Forgiveness

How to Keep Hoping, Even When Nothing Goes Your Way – Lessons from the Bhagavad Gita