The Fourfold Path: Act, Think, Question, Seek

Life today moves quickly. Tasks pile up, responsibilities stretch across the day, and time often feels too short even for what is essential. In the rush to meet deadlines, fulfill roles, and keep things running, we may find ourselves doing things robotically — completing what’s needed, but without space to pause or reconsider. It’s not neglect; it’s simply the pace of modern life. Yet within this very pace lies a quiet possibility: to make small space for thoughtfulness, to bring a little more clarity into what we do, and to gently re-align how we go about our day.

It is undoubtedly an accepted and known fact that, in our everyday life, we have to fulfill Duties & Responsibilities (D&Rs) that are essential and that need to be done mandatorily. It could be professional work, family duties, small humanitarian commitments etc. (I have discussed these D&Rs in my previous article  titled “Where are We – A Mid-life Introspection”. https://nvsatish.com/2025/01/28/where-are-we-a-mid-life-introspection/ We will now look further). Is it enough to simply keep doing these things? Are we right in just completing them somehow, without asking what they truly serve?

Precisely this is what the Bhagavad Gita emphatically teaches — “Duties Must be Done; Action Cannot be Escaped; Societal Purpose Must be Served.” (Karma Yoga, 3.25). Through this teaching, the Gita enlightens us on the need for working towards a larger purpose. That larger purpose could be to carry out our works and duties in such a way so as to benefit the people around us, to support the neighbouring community, or even to help a wider section of society or world at large — rather than serve only private & personal gain.

So, all our duties and responsibilities should not only be completed without deferment but must also be examined to see whether each one is truly serving that larger purpose. Repeating those tasks in the same robotic spirit without inward reflection can turn them into habit, and that habit may drift us farther away from its original aim. To prevent this drift, one must quietly examine how the duty is being done. Taking care not to interrupt the work itself, one must be aware of the direction & purpose that it is serving on a larger scale. This kind of reflection is not a break from duty; it is that part of duty which guides us towards fulfilling its purpose.

Such timely reflection, if we observe, helps us in two ways. (i) It gives a scope for correcting the mistakes in our motive and (ii) it reshapes us on how duties need be carried out. Over a period of time, this kind of inward reflection makes duty thoughtful instead of mechanical. Slowing down is not escape from responsibility; it is how responsibility becomes wise.

When inward reflections expose gaps between our actions and their intended purpose, disciplined inquiry becomes a need. In that pursuit, one must lift oneself by one’s own effort — uddhared ātmanātmānaṁ (Gita 6.5) — and make steady inward attention a responsibility. Giving this a spiritual turn, Shankaracharya puts it in Vivekachudamani (Verse 11): vichāra eva jñānasya mārgaḥ — inquiry is the path to knowledge. Knowledge lights the path of duty; questions keep that light alive.

The Gita’s instruction — tad viddhi praṇipātena paripraśnena sevayā — teaches the method: approach the wise, serve, and ask with respect (Gita 4.34).

Ko’ham — “Who am I?” — is an inner spark ignited by Ramana Maharshi and remains the most fundamental and profound inward question.

While inward inquiry is essential and a crucial stepping stone for inner clarity, it may not always be self-sufficient. Each person carries a unique lens, shaped by one’s own experience, temperament, and way of seeing. When like-minded seekers come together, individual views begin to broaden. What began as a personal search becomes a shared journey. In such company, questions become more purposeful, and answers offer greater clarity. Insight deepens — and everyone benefits.

Through satsang, questions are sharpened, and weak answers fall away. Yoga Vasistha affirms the enormous significance of Satsang in its Vairagya Prakarana (2.12). One should take up others’ questions when none arise within; doing so trains the mind in attentiveness, humility, and the habit of seeking. Dialogue strengthens awareness and invites clarity. One should, within one’s capacity, try to seek answers even for others’ questions before those answers arrive from elsewhere. Shankaracharya’s ‘satsangatve nissangatvam…’ verse (Bhaja Govindam-9) shows the practical effect of such company.

Irrespective of one’s ability to pause for inward reflection, and in these days of running around all day, even the very idea of joining a Satsang physically may seem difficult to think of. Luckily however, the opportunity to associate with Satsang — even in digital form — always brings direction to life. It adds clarity, steadiness, and quiet value that deepens over time. Who said digital technology has no role in developing one’s inner awareness ?

In practice the sequence is simple and necessary: carry out responsibilities, let each action be accompanied by a quiet inward check of motive and method, turn to inquiry when there’s any confusion, get into a respectable Satsang with your unclarified questions, and once there, pursue answers actively — even for others’ questions. Above all, keep sight of any rightful question and of its answer, wherever that answer is found and whoever has asked this question. By now we can clearly see that thinking and questioning are essential companions even as one continues to perform one’s bounden duty.

So, let us conclude with conviction that what keeps duty alive and aligned to the purpose is not just action, but the fourfold rhythm that must accompany it: Act. Think. Question. Seek. Let these four guide every karma you perform — and you will be on your way to becoming a Karma Yogi. – The way of Bhagavad Gita.

(ఈ వ్యాసాన్ని కనుక తెలుగులో చదవాలనుకుంటే , క్రింది లింకును క్లిక్ చెయ్యండి – https://nvsatish.com/2025/10/01/chaturvidha-margam/)

Comments

5 responses to “The Fourfold Path: Act, Think, Question, Seek”

  1. Raghunath Sarma Kotharu avatar
    Raghunath Sarma Kotharu

    Good. This Kali yugam, in this busy world most of them are not getting idea that we need to know about our inner world.

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  2. చతుర్విధ మార్గం – Thoughts on Life and its Philosophy avatar

    […] (ఈ వ్యాసాన్ని ఆంగ్లంలో చూడాలనుకొనేవారు ఇక్కడ క్లిక్ చేయండి – https://nvsatish.com/2025/09/25/the-fourfold-path-act-think-question-seek/) […]

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    […] This essay marks the formal beginning of our journey along The Fourfold Path: Act, Think, Question, Seek. […]

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  4. THINK: The Second Step on the Fourfold Path – My Thoughts on Life and its Philosophy avatar

    […] to this condition is to return to life more consciously. In the journey we have mapped out in “The Fourfold Path: Act, Think, Question, Seek,” this first movement is simply to ACT. As discussed in “ACT – The First Step on the Fourfold […]

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