Remembering Krishna ALWAYS
A Practical Way to Live With Krishna in Mind
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“Always remember Me.”
That line from the Bhagavad Gita sounds simple.
It is not.
You and I live in a world that trains the mind to forget what matters.
Deadlines pull you.
Worries pull you.
Desires pull you.
The phone pulls you.
So when Krishna says in the Bhagavad Gita (8.7):
“Therefore, remember Me at all times and do your duty.”
He is not giving a slogan.
He is giving a method for living in the world without losing your center.
This article is about that method.
Not as theory.
As something you can practice in your actual life.
What “remembering Him always” really means
Many people hear “always remember Krishna” and think it means:
You must stop working.
You must withdraw from life.
You must repeat God’s name non-stop.
That is not what the Gita or the Bhagavata Purana teach.
Krishna speaks to Arjuna on a battlefield.
Not in a forest.
Not in isolation.
The instruction is clear:
Live fully.
Act responsibly.
But keep your inner direction steady.
Remembering Him always means:
You do not forget who your life ultimately belongs to.
You do not let temporary pressures become ultimate authorities.
You bring Krishna into ordinary moments, not just spiritual ones.
This changes how you work.
It changes how you react.
It changes how you face stress.
Not overnight.
Over time.
Why the mind forgets so easily
The mind forgets Krishna for simple reasons:
It runs toward what feels urgent.
It clings to what feels threatening.
It repeats what it practices.
If your daily mental diet is:
News
Comparison
Anxiety
Ambition
Entertainment without pause
Then remembrance has no space to grow.
This is not a moral failure.
It is how attention works.
The Bhagavata Purana repeatedly shows that remembrance grows from association and hearing.
What you expose your mind to shapes what it remembers when pressure hits.
Ask yourself:
What fills my mental space most days?
What do I reach for when I feel restless?
When I am anxious, where does my mind run?
These answers tell you how “remembering Him always” currently looks in your life.
The Gita’s method: bring Krishna into action
Krishna does not ask Arjuna to escape his duty.
He asks him to remember Krishna while acting.
This matters for you.
You may be:
Running a business
Raising children
Managing health
Handling family responsibilities
Trying to stay afloat in a demanding life
You do not need a different life to remember Krishna.
You need a different inner posture.
Try this shift:
Before you begin a task, pause for a few seconds.
Acknowledge Krishna inwardly.
Then act.
Not with words.
With intention.
This practice is small.
But repetition builds memory.
Over time, your actions start carrying a different quality.
Less desperation.
More steadiness.
What the Bhagavata Purana teaches about steady remembrance
The Bhagavata Purana shows that remembrance grows through hearing, reflection, and repetition.
The story of King Parikshit listening to the Bhagavata for seven days before his death is not just about death preparation.
It shows what focused listening does to the heart.
You may not have seven uninterrupted days.
But you can build short, daily contact.
Read a small passage regularly.
Reflect on one idea during your day.
Let one line return to your mind when you feel reactive.
Remembrance grows by contact.
Not by force.
What the bhakti saints point to
Bhakti saints speak plainly about remembrance.
Kabir keeps returning to one theme:
Without steady remembrance, life gets scattered.
He warns that the mind runs after many things, and devotion weakens when remembrance becomes occasional rather than rooted.
Mirabai’s songs show how remembrance grows through love, not pressure.
Her devotion is not about discipline alone.
It is about inner attachment to Krishna that reshapes desire itself.
Tulsidas emphasizes that remembrance of the Divine Name stabilizes the heart when life feels unstable.
He does not describe remembrance as an achievement.
He presents it as support.
These voices agree on one point:
You do not remember God by willpower alone.
You remember God by building a relationship.
Practical ways to remember Him in daily life
This is where devotion becomes real.
Not in grand declarations.
In small habits.
1. Anchor one moment in your day
Pick one daily moment:
When you wake up
Before you start work
Before you eat
Before you sleep
In that moment:
Pause
Remember Krishna
Offer your day, task, or rest inwardly
Do this every day.
The mind learns through repetition.
2. Use your stress as a reminder
Stress exposes what you rely on.
When you feel tense:
Notice it
Pause
Bring Krishna to mind
Then respond
This does not remove problems.
It changes how you carry them.
Ask yourself in that moment:
Can I face this without panicking?
Can I act without losing inner balance?
These questions open space for remembrance.
3. Reduce what scatters your attention
You do not need to quit the world.
You do need to notice what drains your clarity.
Look at:
How much time goes into endless scrolling
How often your mind loops in comparison
How quickly you move from one distraction to another
Reducing noise creates room for remembrance.
Not by force.
By choice.
4. Speak His name quietly in ordinary moments
You do not need to chant loudly or formally.
Speak Krishna’s name:
While walking
While waiting
While doing routine work
This trains the mind to return.
The name becomes a point of contact.
Not a performance.
How remembrance reshapes your inner life
When remembrance grows, subtle changes appear:
You pause before reacting.
You recover faster from emotional swings.
You stop turning every problem into a personal crisis.
You feel less alone in decisions.
This does not mean life becomes easy.
It means you stop carrying it alone.
The Gita does not promise comfort.
It offers steadiness.
What blocks remembrance
Be honest with yourself about what blocks you.
Common blocks:
Guilt: “I am not devotional enough.”
Perfectionism: “If I can’t remember always, why try?”
Comparison: “Others are more sincere than me.”
Delay: “I’ll take this seriously later.”
These thoughts weaken practice.
Remembrance grows through imperfect effort.
Not through flawless performance.
Ask yourself:
What excuse do I repeat when I skip inner practice?
What fear keeps me inconsistent?
Seeing the block clearly weakens it.
A simple daily check
End your day with one question:
Where did I remember Krishna today?
It could be:
In one moment of stress
In one moment of gratitude
In one pause before reacting
Acknowledge it.
Then ask:
Where did I forget?
Not to judge yourself.
To notice your patterns.
This honest review builds awareness.
Awareness supports remembrance.
Remembering Him always is built, not declared
You do not wake up one day remembering Krishna always.
You build toward it.
You build it by:
What you feed your mind
How you respond under pressure
How often you pause and return
How honestly you notice your distractions
This is not about being spiritual in public.
It is about being steady in private.
You already remember many things daily:
Your responsibilities
Your worries
Your goals
You can train your mind to remember Krishna too.
Not by adding strain.
By changing direction, gently and consistently.
That is how “remembering Him always” becomes real.



Loved the ending!!!
We remember many things daily already: Our responsibilities, Our worries, Our goals.
We can remember Krishna too.
Not by adding strain, but by changing direction, gently and consistently.
I love this post, even before reading it, and then even more after reading it. The presence of the Divine is behind the words and within them, so the love is also present without the words, but the words, nonetheless, and Sri Krishna's wisdom give that love the form it requires to land in my inbox 🙏