We can learn a lot from our surroundings and in this league, we have this post related to Football lessons from the Bhagwad Gita. Hope it will make interesting reading for you as Lord Krishna was the first motivational speaker on the battlefield.
"You will be nearer to heaven playing football than studying the Bhagwad Gita." This advice of Swami Vivekananda to a frail young boy who had come to him to study Vedanta has led many to presume that the Swami meant football can teach more than the study of the Bhagwad Gita. Swamiji was actually talking of the need to be bodily strong even to pursue spiritual education.
In his memoir, What I Talk About When I Talk About Running, Japanese writer Haruki Murakami too says that he took to running to develop the tenacity and resilience needed for long hours of writing. In the process, Murakami became a prolific marathoner too. It is this need for physical resilience and strength that Swami Vivekananda was talking about. Spiritual study is like a marathon. It is like a FIFA World Cup. A series of them. One needs a high level of body fitness and mental balance to reach the goal.
The 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar mirrored the Bhagwad Gita in many ways. Victory and defeat, hope and despair, happiness and sorrow, selflessness, devotion, karma and jnana, the great universality of mankind – all was on display on the field.
Inspiring captains like Lionel Messi of Argentina and Luka Modric of Croatia exemplify Gita's shloka 3:21: Whatever a great person does, that other people also do, imitate; whatever they establish as the standard, that other people follow.
Rising high on scoring goals, sinking low on giving them away, teams swayed to the cadence of the great dvandva, duality, of life. Kylian Mbappe's unrelenting remorse after losing the final was in stark contrast to Lionel Messi's all-accepting smile when Mbappe scored 2 goals in 97 seconds to level the score at a time when Argentina was quite sure to win. Messi was a picture of equanimity even as his dream of winning the World Cup was being tossed about on the unpredictable waves of change.
Krishn says in verse 2:38: Having made pleasure and pain, gain and loss, victory and defeat the same, engage in battle for the sake of battle; thus you shall not incur sin.
The advice is clear. It is equanimity that ensures success. Equanimity in the face of all situations is the secret method of keeping the mind ever open and ever ready to take the right action. In the Gita shloka 2:48, Krishn advises: Perform action O' Dhananjay, abandoning attachment, being steadfast in yog and balanced in success and failure. Evenness of mind is called yog.
No game is played to lose. Krishn is simply driving home that it is the more equanimous and the more balanced ones who win the day. Equanimity is not possible when the mind gets clouded by duality. This duality of vision – seeing victory and defeat, happiness and sorrow, faith and doubt at the same time – shatters the single pointedness of vision needed to ensure success. And then, when it comes to the crunch of deciding the winner through penalty kicks, like it did in the hard-fought final between Argentina and France, it is the calmer, more balanced minds that zero in on the goal and take home the trophy.
To Kylian Mbappe and the French team one can quote the famous Gita verse 2:47: Your right is to your work only and never to its fruits; let not the fruit of action be your motive, nor let your attachment be to inaction.