Alongside karma yoga and bhakti, the Gita asks for a third practice.
Meditation.
The word has been used in recent years to mean many things. Relaxation. Mindfulness. Stress reduction. Those are useful, but they are not what the Gita means.
In this teaching, meditation is the gradual training of the mind. The work that takes the mind from where it usually is — restless, reactive, dragged from thought to thought — to where it can be: quiet enough to hold attention on one thing without slipping.
This is not a single technique. It is a continuum. At one end is the most basic calming. At the other is the ability to hold attention on whatever you choose, for as long as you choose, without your mind running off. The whole of that span is meditation.
Meditation, like the other practices, is tailored to the meditator. A teacher working with a person would meet them where they are, give them what is useful at this point in their life, and let the practice deepen at the pace the mind allows. A very agitated mind cannot do what an already-quiet mind can. Neither does a quiet mind need what the agitated mind needs. The instruction changes as the meditator changes.
What follows is the shape of that continuum, so you have a picture of where you might begin and what comes after.
The beginning: deep breathing
For a mind that is highly agitated — too restless to acknowledge ishvara in the morning, too jumpy to let go of outcomes during the day — meditation begins as something simple.
Sit comfortably. Close your eyes. Take long, slow breaths in and out.
That is the whole instruction.
You are not trying to concentrate on the breath. You are not trying to keep your attention from drifting. You are simply breathing slowly and deeply. The thinking mind can do whatever it wants. Thoughts will come. Plans, worries, memories. Let them.
The reason this works is physical, not spiritual. Slow deep breathing activates the parasympathetic nervous system. The heart rate drops. The body comes out of its alert, scanning mode. The thoughts thin out on their own, without your having to manage them. This is a medical fact, not a teaching claim — any physiologist will tell you the same.
After ten or fifteen minutes of slow breathing, a mind that could not hold still earlier can hold still now. Not because you forced it. Because the body underneath it has calmed down.
This is where most agitated minds need to start. Some practitioners stay here for years. That is fine. The body has to come down before any of what follows becomes possible.
A little further along: watching the mind
When the body has calmed and the breathing is no longer effortful, the practice can deepen.
You no longer need the long slow breaths. Sit, and let your attention move from the body to what the mind is doing.
Thoughts come. About yesterday. About tomorrow. About what someone said. About what you should be doing instead. Watch them.
Do not chase them. Do not push them away. Let them pass through, the way clouds pass across the sky.
The mechanism here is different from the breathing. Earlier, the body calmed and the thoughts thinned as a side effect. Here, you are doing something the mind does not naturally do — observing thoughts rather than being carried by them. Over weeks and months of this, the grip of the thoughts on your attention loosens. You are not adding anything. You are not subtracting anything. You are watching, and the watching itself changes the relationship.
Further still: holding attention on one thing
When the mind has grown quieter through watching, the practice can deepen again.
You pick one thing to hold your attention on. The breath, this time deliberately. Or a sound. Or a word. Or an image. It does not matter much which.
The point is the holding itself. Keep your attention on the one thing for ten minutes. Then twenty. Then longer. When it slips, bring it back. The bringing back is the work.
This is the kind of attention that real inquiry will need. It is what the meditation continuum is ultimately heading toward.
These three movements are not steps you march through in order. They describe how meditation tends to deepen as the mind grows more capable. Some practitioners start with deep breathing and stay there for years. Some, with already-quiet minds, can go almost directly to holding attention. Most move along the continuum gradually, with periods of going back when life becomes difficult and the body needs calming again.
The question is not which point on the continuum you are at. It is whether you are practicing.
And meditation is not only what happens when you sit. The capacity you are building — to keep your attention where you choose — travels with you into the rest of your day. Into the meeting. Into the conversation. Into the task. Into the moment of difficulty. The cushion is the gym. Life is where the strength gets used.
Begin where you are. None of this needs to be hurried.