Bhagavad Gita Guide
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Fear of Failure

Bhagavad Gita For Fear Of Failure

When the mind becomes trapped in 'what if I fail?', the Gita shifts attention from imagined defeat to sincere action. These verses help you work with more courage and less paralysis.

Common situations

  • avoiding action because the result feels scary
  • self-worth tied too closely to success
  • pressure, comparison, and paralysis

Relevant Bhagavad Gita verses

These verses are strong starting points for this topic. Open the full app to ask your exact question and get a verse-grounded answer.

2.47
You have a right to perform your prescribed duty, but you are not entitled to the fruits of action.
Themes: career, anxiety, discipline, duty
2.48
Be steadfast in yoga, perform your duty, and abandon attachment to success and failure.
Themes: anxiety, focus, discipline, career
18.66
Abandon all limited notions of duty and take refuge in Me alone; I will liberate you from sorrow.
Themes: anxiety, purpose, grief, faith

Ask your exact situation

The strongest experience is when you describe your real problem in your own words. The app will then try to find the most relevant verse, meaning, and next step.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What does the Bhagavad Gita say about the fear of failure?
The Gita repeatedly turns the seeker away from obsession with outcomes and toward right action. Chapter 2 verse 47 is central here: your responsibility is action, not guaranteed success. That insight weakens fear because identity is no longer fused with the result.
Which Bhagavad Gita verse helps when fear stops you from trying?
Chapter 2 verse 48 is especially relevant because Krishna asks Arjuna to act from equanimity, not from panic. When effort is rooted in steadiness rather than fear, action becomes possible again.