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BG - 8

Recap

BG 15.14 - last session the focus was on COMPLEXITY of the DIGESTION PROCESS. Ask a few questions.

Bhajan

Katha

Teaching Time

What Children Need to Bring

Each child should bring any ONE small food item from home - send a note to Parents.

Suggested options (choose one):

  • A small bowl of cooked rice

  • Chapati / bread

  • Fruit (banana / apple / orange)

  • A few pieces of boiled vegetables

  • A small cup of cooked dal / khichdi

Dear Parents,

Hare Krishna 🙏

For the upcoming BPSS class, we will be doing a simple, hands-on activity to help children appreciate how wonderfully Krishna takes care of us inside our bodies.

Please send your child with ONE small food item (any one):

  • Cooked rice / chapati / fruit / boiled vegetables / cooked dal
    (Just a small bowl is enough.)

This activity is safe, supervised, and symbolic—children will not taste or cook anything themselves. The focus is on gratitude and understanding Krishna’s role in sustaining our life, as explained in the Bhagavad-gita.

Thank you for your cooperation in making this a meaningful experience for the children.

Warm regards,
BPSS Team

What the Teacher should Arrange

Activity & Demo Setup

  • Food processor / mixer (teacher-handled only)

  • One sealed vial labeled clearly:
    “ONE DROP OF BLOOD” (symbolic – colored water - dark red)

  • Disposable bowls / plates

  • Napkins / wipes

  • Table covering (to manage spills)

The Challenge

Make teams and tell them the challenge.

Say clearly:

“Take some of the food items from the table and using the Blender Produce just ONE DROP OF BLOOD.”

Let teams come forward.


Let them try:

  • Crushing in the Blender - let them actually do it (teacher should operate the blender)

  • Mixing

Then stop.

Ask directly:

  • “Did we succeed?”

  • “Why not?”

Let them answer:

  • “We don’t know how”

  • “We need a lab”

  • “It’s complicated”

Do not correct them yet.

The Turning Point

Hold the vial and say:

“Every day your body is making new blood. Yesterday you ate breakfast, lunch and dinner. And your body took all that and converted into blood.

Pause.

Then ask:

“Who is doing what we cannot?”

Silence.

Now introduce Bhagavad-gita 15.14 (either chant or paraphrase):

“Krishna says:
‘I become the fire of digestion and digest the food.’”

Then ask the key question:

“Why does Krishna take personal ownership of digestion?”

Let them think.


Krishna is not claiming credit. He is revealing dependencedependence..

PART 2 — THE INTELLIGENCE QUESTION

Principle 2: Digestion Is Intelligent (Guidance)

Now you dismantle the “it’s just chemistry” idea.


The Killer Question (Ask exactly like this)

“If digestion were only chemical, why doesn’t it digest the stomach itself?”

Do not rush. Let the room sit in silence.


Ask follow-ups:

  • “Is stomach acid weak?” → No

  • “Is it selective?” → Yes

  • “Can acid decide?” → No

Then say:

“Chemicals cannot decide. Machines cannot decide.

Decision requires intelligence.”


The Core Realization

Say slowly:

“Digestion decides:

  • what becomes blood

  • what becomes waste

  • what is stored

  • what is rejected

  • when to stop digestion

And you are not consulted.”

Then ask:

“So who is controlling this?”

Let someone say “God” or “Krishna”.

Then say:

“Krishna doesn’t deny it. He says: ‘That is Me.’”

Extra Points for Seniors

THE DEBATE (CORE ADDITION)

This is where seniors engage intellectually, not emotionally.


Frame the Debate, Divide the group into two sides:

Side A – Mechanism

“Digestion is automatic, chemical, and self-sufficient.”

Side B – Guidance

“Digestion requires intelligence and regulation.”

Clarify:

  • This is not a faith debate

  • Use reason, logic, experience

  • No quoting scriptures yet


Debate Prompts (teacher asks one by one)

Prompt 1 (Blood)

“If digestion is automatic,
why can we not produce even one drop of blood?”

Let both sides answer.


Prompt 2 (Selectivity)

“Why does digestion choose nutrients and reject waste?”

Follow-up:

“Can chemistry choose?”


Prompt 3 (Self-protection — the killer)

“Why doesn’t the stomach digest itself?”

Let them struggle. Don’t rescue them.

Prompt 4 (Timing)

“Why does digestion stop when the body is full?”

Ask: â€œWho says ‘enough’?”

Final Reflection

Ask them individually to answer:

  1. “What part of digestion surprised you today?”

  2. “What assumption did this challenge?”

  3. “Does Krishna now feel distant or closer?”


CLOSING LINE (Memorable)

End with this:

“If Krishna is this careful with your digestion, He is not careless with your life.”

Silence.