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Chapter 1 of 12

KARYA

INTRODUCTION: THE GITA ALREADY KNEW

Chapter 1 of 12 165 words 1 min read Purpose & Career

Kurukshetra. Approximately 3200 BCE.

Arjuna stands between two armies. His hands tremble. His Gandiva bow slips from his grip. He looks across the battlefield and sees uncles, teachers, cousins — people he loves on both sides.

He tells Krishna: "I cannot do this. I will not fight."

Krishna's response isn't motivational. It isn't emotional. It's the most precise description of peak performance neuroscience ever recorded:

"Karmanye vadhikaraste, Ma phaleshu kadachana" You have the right to action alone, never to its fruits.

— Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 2, Verse 47

In 2026, neuroscience has a name for this state: Flow.

When you detach from outcomes and become completely absorbed in the action itself — your prefrontal cortex quiets (transient hypofrontality), your inner critic disappears, your neurochemistry floods with dopamine + norepinephrine + endorphins + anandamide + serotonin, and you perform at levels that feel superhuman.

Krishna didn't just give spiritual advice. He gave Arjuna the neurological key to peak performance.

This book is about that key.


© 2026 Atharva Inamdar. Licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. Free to read and share with attribution.

Chapter details & citation

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KARYA by Atharva Inamdar

Chapter 1 of 12 · Purpose & Career

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https://atharvainamdar.com/read/karya/introduction-the-gita-already-knew

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Themes: Flow state, Purpose, Career, Peak performance, Nishkama karma.