ध्यायतो विषयान्पुंसः सङ्गस्तेषूपजायते । सङ्गात्सञ्जायते कामः कामात्क्रोधोऽभिजायते ॥
dhyāyato viṣayān puṃsaḥ saṅgas teṣūpajāyate | saṅgāt sañjāyate kāmaḥ kāmāt krodho 'bhijāyate ||
Thinking → clinging → craving → anger. The chain of suffering begins in where you let your mind dwell.
Word by word (3)
- dhyāyataḥ viṣayān
- — dwelling upon / meditating on sense-objects · Dhyāyataḥ — from dhyā (to think upon, to meditate). The same word as 'dhyāna' (meditation). The ironic precision: the same mental faculty used for spiritual meditation, when turned toward sense-objects, begins the chain of downfall. Viṣaya = sense-object. Constant mental dwelling on desired objects is the starting point.
- saṅgaḥ upajāyate
- — attachment arises / clinging is born · Saṅga from sañj (to stick, to cling). What begins as simple thought becomes adhesion — the mind sticks to the object. This is the second stage: thought has become fixation, mental clinging.
- kāmāt krodhaḥ abhijāyate
- — from desire, anger is born · Kāma = desire, longing (here: the stage when clinging becomes active craving). Krodha = anger. The link between desire and anger is precise: anger is thwarted desire. When kāma (desire) is blocked, krodha (anger) is its natural offspring.
When the mind keeps dwelling on sense-objects, attachment forms. From attachment comes desire. From desire — when it is blocked — comes anger.
A modern analogy
You keep scrolling past posts from your ex. First it's just looking. Then you can't stop looking. Then you want them back. Then you're angry — at them, at yourself, at the situation. Every step is traceable: dhyāna (dwelling) → saṅga (attachment) → kāma (desire) → krodha (anger). The chain doesn't begin at anger. It begins at where you let your mind linger.
Take with you
- Where you habitually direct your mental attention is where your suffering will be rooted.
- The chain begins at dhyāna (mental dwelling) — not at desire or anger. Control the dwelling, not just the explosion.
- This is why 'stop being angry' advice fails — by the time anger appears, you're four steps deep. Intervene at step one.
- Anger is almost always downstream of frustrated desire, which is downstream of attachment, which starts with habitual thought.
V62-63 form one of the most psychologically precise passages in all Indian philosophical literature. This 'chain of destruction' (prapatti-chain in reverse) maps the descent from innocent mental activity to complete cognitive and moral collapse in six steps: dwelling → attachment → desire → anger → delusion → memory-loss → intellect-destruction → ruin. The chain is not accidental but causal — each step produces the next with psychological inevitability. Shankaracharya notes the opening word dhyāyataḥ with emphasis: the same capacity that makes spiritual meditation possible (dhyāna) is what, when directed toward sense-objects, produces bondage. The tool is neutral; the direction determines liberation or entanglement. This is the Gita's account of why sense-discipline is essential: not because objects are evil but because undirected mental dwelling on them initiates an avalanche.
Advaita lens
The chain begins with dhyāyataḥ — mere dwelling of attention on objects. For Advaita the root error is misplaced attention itself: consciousness lending its reality to objects creates saṅga (bonding), and the downward ladder is built of identification, not of the objects themselves. The world does not bind; the Self forgetting itself into its contents binds. V62 is the micro-mechanics of adhyāsa (superimposition) rendered as psychology.
Bhakti lens
Bhakti reads V62 and turns the same mechanism upward: dwelling generates attachment — therefore dwell on the Lord. Smaraṇa (constant remembrance) uses the identical chain in reverse: what you contemplate, you bond with; what you bond with, you desire; what you desire shapes you. The entire architecture of devotional practice — japa, kirtan, remembrance — is V62's psychology redeemed: bond with Krishna and the chain lifts instead of dropping.
Karma-Yoga lens
The actor's warning label: outcomes contemplated obsessively become attachments, attachments become craving (kāma), and thwarted craving becomes anger (krodha). The karma-yogi interrupts the cascade at step one — attention management is the first discipline of detached action. You cannot stop anger at the anger-stage; you stop it at the dwelling-stage, days earlier, by refusing to let the mind marinate in fruits.
Modern parallels
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy identifies 'rumination' as the primary driver of depression and anxiety — the repetitive mental dwelling on negative objects (the dhyāyataḥ of pain). The CBT intervention targets exactly V62's mechanism: interrupt the habitual dwelling before it cascades. Attachment theory (Bowlby, Ainsworth) describes how early emotional attachments form through repeated exposure and thought — the saṅga mechanism at the developmental level. Anger management research consistently shows that anger is the late-stage symptom; the interventions that work target the early-stage desire and expectation.
Public-domain translations (5) compare all →
When a man dwells on objects with his mind, attachment for them is produced. From attachment springs desire; from desire comes anger. [1]
When a man thinks of objects, attachment for them arises; from attachment desire is born; from desire anger arises. [4]
A man who thinks of sense-objects conceives an attachment for them. From that attachment springs desire; from desire anger comes. [6]
Who meditates on objects of the sense, Conceives a clinging to them; from that clinging Grows the fever of desire; desire inflamed Kindles the fire of wrath. [7]
When a man meditates on objects, attachment for them is produced. From attachment grows desire; from desire arises anger. [9]
This verse speaks to
Where this thread continues
Anger → delusion → memory loss → intellect destroyed → total ruin. Know this chain before it starts.
The enemy is desire and anger, born of rajas — all-devouring, all-sinful. Know this as your internal enemy.
Three gates to hell, destructive of the self: kāma, krodha, lobha. Therefore abandon this triad.
Sāttvic tapas: the three-fold tapas practiced with supreme śraddhā, without fruit-desire, by the disciplined.
Yoga is the disconnection from suffering — practise it with firm resolve and a mind that does not despond.
Sannyāsa = abandoning desire-motivated action; tyāga = abandoning fruits of ALL action — say the learned.