THE ENERGY ENHANCEMENT MEDITATION COURSE BY VIDEO
MEDITATION
The Secret
The Cool White Shine Of His Beloved
MEDITATION
The Secret
The Cool White Shine Of His Beloved
The first question:
Question 1
OSHO, I TOO, THEN, AM A DONKEY. IF YOU HAD GIVEN ME IHMN TO MEDITATE OVER,
I WOULD HAVE SILENTLY ACCEPTED IT OUT OF TRUST THAT YOU WERE GIVING ME WHAT
I NEEDED. OR IS IT A MATTER OF TRUST? CAN YOU PLEASE EXPLAIN THE RIGHT
ATTITUDE OF A DISCIPLE RECEIVING INSTRUCTION FROM THE MASTER?
Idama,
the moment you recognize that you are ignorant, you are no more, because
only intelligence can see the point of one's own stupidity. The stupid
person cannot see it; that's why he is stupid. The most fundamental
stupidity is that one cannot see it. When you start seeing your
unintelligence, intelligence is arising in you. When you start recognizing
your confusion you are becoming clear. Otherwise who will recognize the
confusion? You are becoming separate from the confusion.
You say, "I too, then, am a donkey." If really you can see it, then you are
no more. Then the first ray of intelligence has penetrated you. No donkey
can accept it; the donkey will make much fuss about it. If you tell the
donkey, "You are a donkey," he will kick you! He will become your enemy. But
if you can find a donkey who simply tries to understand the fact of his
stupidity, that's enough proof that the change has started happening.
And secondly, Idama, you did not understand rightly the meaning of the
story. The person who had come to the Sufi Master was not a disciple. He was
just curious. He had come accidently. Just because he was going to all kinds
of people -- to all Masters, learned people, schools -- he had come to this
Master too. It was just part of his accidental life. He was not there to
seek and to search. He was not there to be in the company of the Master; he
was not ready to dissolve into the Master. He was not surrendered either.
Listen to the story again:
A MAN WHO HAD SPENT MANY YEARS TRYING TO PUZZLE OUT MEANINGS WENT TO SEE A
SUFI AND TOLD HIM ABOUT HIS SEARCH....
He must have bragged about his search. He had come to be recognized by the
Master, that "Yes, you are a great seeker; you have already done so much."
He had come to be certified. He had not come as a seeker, he had not come to
become part of the family of the Master, because unless somebody becomes
part of the family of the Master, falls in tune with the Master, nothing can
be done for him. He was an outsider, just a visitor, was bragging about his
search -- which was utterly meaningless because he was simply trying to
think over puzzles.
That's what philosophy is: it is nothing but trying to puzzle out meanings.
It is like a blind man thinking about light.
You must have heard the ancient Indian parable that five blind men went to
see an elephant. They touched the elephant from all sides. Somebody touched
his legs and thought that the elephant is like a pillar, obviously, and so
on, so forth; and they all started quarreling. Everybody was proposing a
philosophy about the elephant and nobody had seen the elephant. They were
all blind, but a part of the elephant had been touched by each. But the part
is not the whole, and if you start calling the part the whole you are
falling into one of the greatest lies possible. It is the greatest lie
because it contains a little portion of truth in it. It is a half-truth, a
partial truth, and a partial truth is more dangerous than a total lie
because it can deceive people. You can be deceived through it, and you can
deceive others, because it contains a little ingredient of truth.
They all started fighting and quarreling. That's what philosophers have
been doing; this is the story about philosophers.
And each philosopher has touched a part -- because the totality is not
conceivable through the intellect. The totality is conceivable only when you
dissolve your ego, your intellect, your heart, everything into it -- when
you disappear into the ocean like a dewdrop falling into the ocean. Then you
know the whole of it, then you see, then you experience. Otherwise everybody
comes to touch a small portion of this infinite universe, and then he starts
claiming, "This is the truth." That's how systems of philosophy arise.
This man must have been a philosopher. He was trying out, figuring out what
this reality is, who has created it, why he has created it, what is the
purpose of existence, what is the goal, what is the source. And those are
all puzzles, and insoluble puzzles; they cannot be solved. Only stupid
people become interested in them, but these stupid people think they are
religious.
Seeing this man's utter stupidity, the Master had given him another puzzle,
because that's what he was interested in.
I will not give you IHMN unless I see that a donkey has arrived. Donkeys
keep far away from me -- they know that they will be exposed here. They
never come close to me. It needs courage to come close to me because the
closer you come, the more you will be exposed; the closer you come, the more
naked you will be standing under the sun; the closer you come, the more your
image about yourself will be shattered into pieces; the closer you come, the
more you will see that whatsoever you have been doing up to now has been
utterly absurd.
It needs guts to come close to me. It always needs guts to come close to a
Master.
The man had come just out of curiosity: maybe he can get another puzzle.
His interest was not truth, his interest was puzzles. He wanted some puzzle
so he could take a challenge and start working out the way to solve it. He
was not interested in truth.
Truth is not a puzzle at all. Let me repeat it: truth is not a puzzle.
Truth is not a problem, not at all. Truth is very simple, utterly simple.
And truth is not a problem, but a mystery -- just as love is a mystery, not
a problem. You cannot solve it through logic, mathematics. You can move into
love, you can be madly in love, you can have the taste of it, it can
transform you, but it is not a problem to be solved but a mystery to be
lived.
Truth is this mystery that surrounds you, in the form of people, in the
form of trees, animals, birds, stars. This whole mystery is the truth. There
is nothing problematic about it. It is already here. You are in it; how can
you solve it? You are it; who is there to solve it? There is nobody except
the mystery. How can a small ripple in the ocean solve the mystery of the
ocean? It itself is part of the mystery. So are we.
The religious person is one who has seen the fact that existence is not
problematic; it is mysterious, it is miraculous. You dive deep into it.
Celebrate it Make a festival out of it. Sing, dance, love, pray, paint,
create music -- but don't try to solve it.
The musician is much closer than the philosopher; so is the poet much
closer than the philosopher; so is the dancer even closer than the musician
and the poet. Why is the dancer so much closer? Because in the dance you
dissolve: the dancer disappears and only the dance remains. Dance is one of
the deepest meditations possible.
In India we have conceived of God as the dancer, Nataraj. That's very
significant, because when a painter paints, immediately he becomes separate
from the painting. If the painting remains in his being, he is one with it.
When it is yet hidden, just a seed, just a thought, a dream, then the
painter is one with his painting. The moment he has painted it, poured it on
the canvas, he has become separate from it. Duality has arisen. So is it the
case with the poet, so is it the case with the musician.
Only the dancer has something unique: the dancer remains one with the
dance. Even when he starts dancing, the unity is not broken, there is no
duality. Utter oneness. In fact, when the dancer is thinking about the dance
there is a duality -- the idea of the dance and the dancer -- there is a
subtle duality. The moment he starts dancing even that duality disappears.
Then the dancer is the dance. There is no dancer separate from the dance, no
dance separate from the dancer. This is Unio Mystica.
God is a dancer. That means he has not painted the world; otherwise he
would have become separate from it. It is not his poetry; it is not his
music. It is his dance. He is in it, he is it -- right this very moment,
these green trees, and the sun pouring its gold through them, and the call
of the bird, and you here sitting in silence, just being with me for no
particular reason, just enjoying this moment, this silence. This is it.
The man who had come to the Sufi Master was a thinker; he was not a
disciple. Very knowledgeable. Had he been a disciple, the Master would have
never given him IHMN, because it is utter nonsense. He had given this to the
man just to see how he reacted -- and the man was very happy, grateful, that
now he had got a great Sufi puzzle, he would go and meditate. It was his ego
that was satisfied. He was gratified. It was not trust that he didn't ask a
question; it was because of the ego that he didn't ask a question. How can
such a great philosopher ask a question? He will work it out himself; he
will go home and ponder over it.
Idama, you ask me, "If you had given me IHMN to meditate over, I would have
silently accepted it out of trust.... " He had not accepted it out of trust.
If he had known even a little bit of trust, if the Master had seen even a
little trust in his being, this puzzle would not have been given to him.
There was no trust. The man must have been a doubter because thinkers live
through doubt. They live in doubt; doubt is their very medium of
functioning.
A student comes to the Master with all kinds of doubts. That is the
difference between a student and a disciple. When the disciple comes, he
comes all in trust.
... THE SUFI SAID, "GO AWAY AND PONDER THIS -- IHMN." THE MAN WENT AWAY....
Not because he trusted, not because he was a devotee, not because he was in
any love relationship with the Master, but just because he said, "Okay, so I
will bring the answer. Just give me a little chance. I have all the
capacities and the intelligence and the talent, and I have worked out many
puzzles before. Soon I will be here with the answer. "
... WHEN HE CAME BACK, THE SUFI WAS DEAD. "NOW I SHALL NEVER KNOW THE
TRUTH!" MOANED THE PUZZLER....
But he could not get anything out of those four puzzling letters, IHMN --
because there was nothing to get out of them.
... AT THAT MOMENT THE SUFI'S CHIEF DISCIPLE APPEARED. "IF," HE SAID, "YOU
ARE WORRYING ABOUT THE SECRET MEANING OF IHMN, I WILL TELL YOU. IT IS THE
INITIALS OF THE PERSIAN PHRASE 'IN HURUF MAANI NADARAND' -- WHICH MEANS:
'THESE LETTERS HAVE NO MEANING.'"
There is a subtle point to be understood. If the Master had seen that this
man had accepted out of trust, if this man had bowed down and touched the
feet of the Master -- if the Master had seen in some way that he had
accepted out of trust he would have said, "Wait, let me change it. You don't
need a cabbage, you are not a donkey. "
Trust is the greatest intelligence. Why don't people trust? because they
don't trust their intelligence. They are afraid, they are afraid that they
may be cheated. They are afraid; that's why they doubt. Doubt is out of
fear. Doubt is out of a kind of insecurity in your own intelligence. You are
not so confident that you can trust and you can go into trust. Trust needs
great intelligence, courage, integrity. It needs a great heart to go into
it. If you don't have enough intelligence, you protect yourself through
doubt. It is doubt that shows that you have a very mediocre mind, although
mediocre minds, people who doubt too much, think that they are "great
skeptical minds". It doesn't matter what donkeys think; cabbages are
cabbages. It is their nutrition, although they think they are doing
something very great, something very significant. Maybe they are waiting for
the whole existence to be grateful to them because they are transforming
cabbages into great energy!
The man who doubts thinks that he has great intelligence. That's why he
doubts, that's why he is skeptical, that's why he is atheistic and all that.
That is not true.
If you have intelligence you are ready to go into the unknown because you
know that even if the whole known world disappears and you are left in the
unknown, you will be able to settle there, you will be able to make a home
there in the unknown. You trust your intelligence. Doubt is on guard.
Intelligence keeps itself open because intelligence knows, "Whatsoever
happens, I will be able to take the challenge, to respond adequately." The
mediocre mind has not that trust in itself.
What I am saying is you can trust a Master only if you trust yourself. If
you can't trust yourself, how can you trust the Master? If you can't trust
yourself, how can you trust your trust in a Master? It is impossible.
If the Sufi had seen even just a little ray of trust in the man, he would
have immediately taken the puzzle back. He would have himself said, "This
means nothing. You don't need a cabbage -- you are not a donkey. You are not
merely a knowledgeable man; you are a real seeker. Now rather than giving
you a puzzle, I will give you a taste of the mystery that I am, and the
whole existence is, and you are too. But you are fast asleep -- let me
awaken you." Then the whole thing would have been different.
Idama, I cannot give it to you because you have trust.
Have you watched one thing? It is very difficult to deceive a small child.
Even very cunning people find it very difficult. If a small child is
carrying a note of a hundred rupees, nobody will be able to cheat the child.
It will be very difficult to cheat the child. Why? -- because of the trust,
the innocence, the very innocence. And if you take the note from the child
you will never be able to forgive yourself. That memory will haunt you
forever and ever; it will create hell for you.
Have you watched some strange things like this? You are sitting on a
railway platform and you tell some stranger who is sitting by your side,
"Please, just take a little care of my luggage; I am going to purchase a
ticket. " You don' t know the man, he is an absolute stranger, you have
never seen him before. You are leaving your suitcases, all your money, all
your things in the hands of an unknown stranger. Who knows? he may escape
with the whole thing, but it never happens. Why does it never happen? --
because of trust. How can that man deceive you? You trusted him, an unknown
stranger. There was no need to trust him: you don't have any proof of his
honesty, of his character, you know nothing about him -- but it never
happens.
If you are watching your luggage, he may steal something -- that is
possible -- but if you leave your luggage to him and go to purchase a
ticket, it is impossible. What makes it impossible? Trust has its own power.
Trust has its own energy, its own vibe. The very gesture that you trusted
him makes it impossible, he cannot deceive you.
That means, when people deceive you, it is not only their fault. You are
also at fault. You must be carrying mistrust in you -- they got the vibe. If
trust prevents them from deceiving you, then your mistrust about people must
be creating an atmosphere in which deceiving becomes easier for them.
Idama, I would not have given it to you. I have seen the light of trust in
your eyes. And even if I had given it to you, out of trust it would have
changed its total quality. Then it would not have been just a puzzle, it
would have become a koan. If you had accepted not out of the ego but out of
the trust, it would have become a great meditation. And if you had accepted
out of trust and love, just repeating this sound, meaningless sound, would
have led you into some deeper realms of your being.
It is said -- an ancient Indian story -- there was a dacoit, a robber. He
was looting all kinds of people. One day he came across the mystic Narda.
Narda was singing on his one-stringed guitar, utterly lost in ecstasy,
passing through a jungle, and the robber caught hold of him. Narda continued
playing on his one-stringed guitar.
The robber's name is Balia; later on he became a great seer, Valmiki. He
was the first man to write the story of Rama.
Balia could not believe his eyes, because he had seen two types of people
up to then, up to that moment. One was the type who would start trembling,
seeing the strong man. He was a very strong man, and very dangerous and
murderous. Just seeing him there, the other would start trembling and
collapse, would give all that he had, voluntarily, to him. He had seen one
kind was that, the coward, the fearful. And the other kind was the brave,
who would start fighting back. Either the person would start running or the
person would start fighting. Fight or flight -- these had been his two
experiences up to then about people.
But Narda did nothing. He was a third type. For the first time Balia had
come upon the third type. He continued playing on his musical instrument
with the same joy and the same ecstasy. Even Balia started feeling the joy,
the vibe. And Narda was dancing, and Balia also started dancing. And Balia
said, "This is strange. What are you doing to me? I am a robber and a
murderer. I can kill you. You should not trust me. "
But there was nobody to listen to him; the song continued, the music
continued, that celestial vibe continued. And then when Narda was finished
with his music he asked Balia, "What do you want?"
By this time a great change had happened. Balia said, "I would like to be
as ecstatic as you are. Can you help me? I don't want anything else. You are
the first man who is really rich. I have come across only beggars up to now
-- rich beggars, poor beggars, but all beggars. You are the first man who is
really rich, and you have such richness that I cannot rob it. It is your
inner richness. Can I also have some glimpses like this? Is it possible for
a murderer like me, a robber like me, a sinner like me? What should I do?"
Narda said, "You do one thing: start chanting the name of Rama."
Then Narda went, and Balia got really into it. He was a man of will, very
strong. He chanted day in, day out.
When you chant "Rama, Rama, Rama, Rama" continuously, when there is not
much gap between "Rama" and "Rama", slowly, slowly you will start hearing
"Mara, Mara, Mara." If you chant "Rama, Rama, Rama" continuously, the
gestalt will change. The "m" of the "Ram" will become joined with the "ra"
of another "Ram" that is following. Then it becomes "Mara, Mara. " Ram means
God, Ram means the immortal element, the eternal element; mara means death.
Balia was a very uneducated man, had never been in any kind of religious
education. He forgot all about Ram; slowly slowly he chanted only "Mara,
Mara, Mara."
Months passed. Narda went back; he was surprised. Balia was chanting "Mara,
Mara, Mara"; his whole body was chanting "Mara, Mara, Mara." Narda could
feel from miles away the change that had happened to that jungle. It had a
different atmosphere. When he came closer and heard "Mara, Mara," he was
surprised because this man has been chanting completely in a wrong way.
He came closer and saw Balia. The man was totally transformed. He was
luminous -- the ecstasy had happened. It happened even by chanting a wrong
mantra. Narda kept quiet; he didn't say anything to him. There was no need,
no point in disturbing the poor man. He had arrived!
There is a Sufi saying that even a wrong means becomes right in the right
person's hand, and vice versa, even a right means becomes wrong in a wrong
man's hand. And it is so. The ultimate result depends on your heart, not on
the means used. When a Master is alive, he can use any means, and they all
become transforming forces. When the Master is gone, all those means slowly,
slowly lose the grace. Then people go on doing them for centuries, but
nothing happens. Right means in wrong hands are wrong; wrong means in right
hands are right.
If you had trusted, then even this meaningless sound, IHMN, would have
become a great meditation to you.
And the last thing, Idama, you ask, "Can you please explain the right
attitude of a disciple receiving instruction from the Master?" Only no
attitude is the right attitude from the side of the disciple. If you have a
certain attitude, that means you are not totally open. You are open only in
a certain way, in a limited way. You have your certain conditions. No, the
disciple has no conditions; the disciple's surrender is unconditional. He is
just open -- no attitude. Because "attitude" means your mind is still
functioning. You are carrying a certain attitude; you are saying, "If you
say this, I will follow; if you say something else, I am not going to
follow. I will go only up to that limit; beyond that I am not coming with
you."
You are keeping a suspicious eye. You are judging the Master from the
corner of your eye, whether he is giving you the right thing -- as if you
know what is right -- whether he is the right Master -- as if you can judge
who is the right Master and who is not.
How can you judge? You have never known light. How can you judge those eyes
which have seen light?
The only approach -- the right approach -- towards a Master is to have no
attitude. That's the meaning of surrender: just being open, vulnerable. The
disciple has to disappear; only then is he a disciple. If the disciple is
still there then he is only a student, not a disciple; then he has come to
gather a few more bits of knowledge. Then he will accumulate a little more
knowledge and will go home -- a few more feathers for his ego, a few more
decorations.
But you are decorating your prison cell. You can decorate it with precious
stones, with diamonds, but then too it is a prison cell.
The Master is there to help you to come out of your prison, come out of
your ego, come out of the shell that you have become enclosed in. You can't
have any attitude towards the Master. Love knows no attitude, love knows no
conditions. Love is unconditional. Only then is the Master allowed in, with
no strings attached. Only then can the Master pour into your being. And that
very pouring is a transformation.
The second question:
Question 2
IS IT NOT POSSIBLE AT ALL THAT THE, GREAT RELIGIOUS, SCRIPTURES OF THE
WORLD CAN HELP THE SEEKER IN HIS SEARCH FOR GOD?
The real seeker cannot search for God, because to start a search for God
means you have already accepted that God is. You have already concluded. How
can you start a search from a conclusion? You are already prejudiced. You
are a believer, not a seeker. The seeker cannot search for God, because he
does not know.
He can only search into existence, not for god. He can inquire into the
reality that surrounds him, not for God. Yes, but when you go deep into
reality you find God. God cannot be the beginning of your search; it is the
end, the climax, the culmination. God is the discovery. How can you begin
with God?
Once a psychologist and a professor of Jaipur University came to see me. He
said, "I am a man of science and I have decided to prove through scientific
methods and inquiry, the reality, the truth of reincarnation. "
I told him, "Do you know what scientific inquiry means? Scientific inquiry
means that you have not decided anything at all in the beginning. The
inquiry is open. You say,'I am a man of science.' You are not. And you say,
'I have decided to prove through scientific methods the existence, the
reality, the truth of reincarnation.' If you have not already proved it, how
can you accept it? And if you have proved it already, then what are you
going to prove, then what is the point of your inquiry? Either you know the
truth of reincarnation -- then there is no need to inquire, or you don't
know the truth of reincarnation -- then how can you decide from the very
beginning that you are going to prove it? This is a prejudiced inquiry; this
is not inquiry. "
Inquiry means you move without any conclusion. Maybe it is true, maybe it
is not; maybe something else is true. You simply keep your doors open.
Whatsoever the truth, you allow the truth to have its say.
I told the professor, "You are just a Hindu, already prejudiced, believing
in reincarnation. Just as Christians don't believe in it, you believe in it.
A Christian also starts a "scientific inquiry" to prove that there is no
reincarnation. Will it be scientific? It will only be a Christian inquiry,
an effort to use science to prove your prejudices. Your inquiry will be a
Hindu inquiry, not a scientific inquiry. "
The scientist cannot be a Hindu or a Christian or a Mohammedan; the
scientist has simply to be a scientist. He can only inquire. Inquiry means
you have not arrived at any conclusions, no a priori conclusion. That is the
fundamental of all inquiry.
You cannot inquire and search for God. You can only inquire into the
reality that is already available: these trees, these rocks, these rivers,
these people -- you. You have to go into it. No scripture is going to help
you, because all scriptures will make you prejudiced and all scriptures will
only be borrowed. You will become a donkey.
I have heard...
The new clergyman was coming to call, and the mother gave Emma some
instructions:
"If he asks your name, say Emma Jane; if he asks how old you are, say you
are eight years old; if he asks who made you, say God made me."
The clergyman arrived in due time, and, putting down his hat and Bible,
approached little Emma, and patting her head, asked:
"What is your name, little girl?"
"Emma Jane. "
"And how old are you, Emma Jane?"
"Eight years old, " replied Jane.
"Well, well, well! Isn't that fine! Do you know who made you, Emma Jane?"
The little girl hesitated for several moments, and then she replied, "Mamma
did tell me the man's name, but I've gone and forgotten it. "
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Take your time, this site has much new wonderful information. |
Borrowed, learned from others, from scriptures, from traditions, your
knowledge is never going to become your knowing. It will make you only more
and more ridiculous. This is not the way of a seeker.
The seeker has to begin in absolute openness, with no conclusion this way
or that. The seeker has to begin without any belief or disbelief. The seeker
has to begin with great trust in his intelligence, that is true -- trust in
intelligence but not in any conceptions.
Your scriptures can only be in your mouth, they cannot reach your heart.
Some wasps built their nests during the week in a Scotch clergyman's best
breeches. On the Sabbath as he warmed up to his preaching, the wasps too
warmed up, with the result that presently the minister was leaping about
like a jack-in-the-box and slapping his lower anatomy with great vigor, to
the amazement of the congregation.
"Be calm, brethren," he shouted. "The word of God is in my mouth, but the
devil is in my breeches!"
Just learning words, theories, systems of thought is not going to help you
at all. Deep down you will remain the same. Deep down no change has ever
happened through knowledge. At the most you can cultivate a beautiful
personality, a beautiful outside. Jesus has condemned such people as "whited
sepulchres" -- just whitewashed from the outside.
Deep inside, how can words change you? Yes, you can cultivate a decorum,
you can cultivate a certain character, but the character remains
superficial; it is never your consciousness. And only consciousness matters,
only what you can see on your own is decisive. All else will make you a
donkey, and all the scriptures will prove nothing but cabbages.
You ask, "Is it not possible at all that the great religious scriptures of
the world can help the seeker in his search for God?"
Buddha has said again and again, "IHI PASSIKO" -- "Come and see." Don't
believe because the Vedas say so, don't believe because the ancient Masters
say so, don't believe because the traditions say so -- and don't believe
even because I say so. Come and see -- ihi passiko. Come and experiment. But
how can you experiment with scriptures? You can experiment only with a
living Master.
Religion lives only while there is a living Master. Once the Master is
gone, you have scriptures, words, memories, nostalgia, but the spirit has
left. You only have the cage, the bird has flown.
That's how all the traditions have been created. When Jesus was there,
there was life in what he was saying. Those words had fire. His passion was
in his words; his heart was beating in his words. Those words were hot. Now
turn the pages of the Bible -- those words are just ashes, just utterly
cold. There is nothing left. You will have to again find a living Master.
And the problem is, when Jesus is alive nobody listens to him. He is
condemned from every corner. When he dies everybody worships him. The same
people who had been condemning him become his worshipers. They start feeling
guilty. To put their guilt right they start worshiping; worship comes out of
guilt.
The same people who condemned Buddha become Buddhists and go on praising
him for centuries. But when the Buddha is alive he is condemned; only very
rare courageous people follow him. The general masses are always against a
living truth. They are too engrossed in their lies, they are too involved
with their futile life, they are too ignorant to see the light or even to
raise their eyes, and they become angry easily.
The presence of a Buddha or a Christ creates much anger in the masses, but
when the Buddha or the Jesus is gone, the same masses start feeling guilty
that they didn't behave rightly with the man. Now things have to be put
right: they start worshiping. But worship is not religion. Worship is a way
of avoiding religion, and worship brings no transformation, so there is no
risk. You can be a Christian or a Hindu or a Mohammedan; there is no risk.
The risk was there when Mohammed was alive. It was dangerous to be with
that man, it was a question of life and death; but now to be a Mohammedan is
perfectly convenient, comfortable. And if you live amidst Mohammedans it is
dangerous not to be a Mohammedan. It is better to be a Mohammedan; it makes
your life more easy. To be a Mohammedan becomes a kind of lubricant. And so
is the case with the Hindus and the Christians and the Jainas and the
Buddhists. These have become social conveniences.
You will have to come out and search for some place where fire is still
alive, where God is still alive, where a Bible is still in the process of
being born, where a Geeta is being expressed. Soon those words will become
scriptures.
Scriptures are the footprints of the Buddhas, but the Buddhas are gone and
you are worshiping the footprints on the sands of time. It is utterly
meaningless, stupid. Those footprints are not the feet of the Buddha. If you
had surrendered to the feet of Buddha you would have been transported into
another world. From time to eternity you would have been transported, from
the finite to infinity you would have been transported, from death to
deathlessness you would have been transported, if you had surrendered to the
alive feet of a Buddha.
But Buddha is gone. On the sands of time his footprints are left. You are
putting flowers at and bowing down to the footprints, but footprints cannot
help.
That's what your scriptures are all about, footprints -- of beautiful
people, but the worship of the footprints is just meaningless. You cannot
get anything out of the footprints.
If you really want to know the truth of existence you will have to be in
the company of someone who has known. Seek a man who has eyes, seek a man
who has love, seek a man in whose heart there is the flame of prayer. Then
there is a possibility: the flame may jump into your heart. You may become
aflame.
Come closer to a Master. There comes a moment when you are so close, in
deep intimacy, that the flame from one lit candle jumps into another unlit
candle. Then the disciple becomes the Master himself. That's the only way to
seek and search, all other ways are just to avoid, pretend.
The third question:
Question 3
OSHO, I WOULD VERY MUCH LIKE TO TAKE SANNYAS BUT IT WILL BE TOTALLY RUINOUS
FOR MY CAREER AS ORANGE CLOTHES WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED AT MY PLACE OF WORK. IS
THERE ANY ALTERNATIVE TO THIS?
Shirish Ghurye, remember only one thing: if you really want to do
something, do it. If you don't want to do it, don't do it, but be clear.
Don't be a hotch-potch, don't be a mess.
When you really want to be a painter, become a painter then, whatsoever the
risk. Yes, you will not be able to become a prime minister by becoming a
painter. You will not be very respectable in the society, because your
paintings are not useful to the society in any way. They are not
utilitarian. And the greater they are, the less utilitarian they will be.
The more original they are, the less they will be understood and sold. But
if you want to be a painter, be a painter -- even if that means remaining
poor, even if that means remaining starved, even if that means that you will
be dying earlier.
Suffer, if it means suffering, because even in that suffering you will have
a subtle joy that you are doing the thing that you wanted to do. You will
have a tremendous contentment. Comforts you may not have, convenience you
may not have, but you will have contentment, and that is the real value.
But if you think of other things, if you are considering every other thing,
then it is better to be a politician than to be a painter. You will become
rich, you will be powerful, you will be well-known, you will be respected.
Your family will be proud of you; your parents will be proud of you, your
wife, your children, all will be proud of you. Everybody's ego will be
fulfilled. Your neighbors will be proud. Everybody will think that you are a
precious gem, but you will be discontented.
I have heard, a great surgeon was retiring. He had served almost fifty
years. He was now seventy-five, still perfect in his surgery. All his
friends, his patients, his well-wishers, his students had gathered to
celebrate this occasion. Many speeches were delivered in praise of him; he
was praised like anything. He was almost a demigod in his world, in the
world of surgeons.
But he was sitting there looking very sad, and when finally one of his
famous colleagues was praising him and saying that he is the greatest
surgeon that has happened down the ages and it will take many centuries
again to get such a perfect hand, such an artistic hand, the old surgeon
started crying and tears came to his eyes. People were worried about what
had happened, and they asked, "Why do you look so sad and why are tears in
your eyes? You should be perfectly happy. What more can one expect in life?
You are one of the most successful men. "
He said, "That I know, but I know something else too -- I am the most
frustrated too because I wanted to become a dancer and not a surgeon. Now I
have succeeded -- in something which I never wanted to become. My whole life
has been a wastage. Even if I had become only a dancer, unknown to the
world, I would have been utterly contented. I would have done my thing."
Remember, if you want to become a sannyasin, become. There will be
problems; there are bound to be problems. It is not cheap. You will have to
pay the price for it. Yes, you are right, it may ruin your career, but who
bothers for a career except stupid people? Career? What does that mean? That
you will live safe and you will die safe? That you will live with much money
and you will die a rich man? But what about your inner contentment? If your
soul remains crippled and paralyzed, what is the point of gaining the whole
world?
The real thing is to have the joy, the joy of life, that you lived
courageously in your own way and whatsoever was asked as a price, you paid
it. And whenever you attain something through paying for it, it is more
valuable. If you can get it cheap, it loses all value.
Sannyas is costly -- particularly my sannyas. If you become a traditional
sannyasin, Ghurye, there will be no problem.
Just a few days before a Jaina woman came and started crying. I said, "What
is the matter?" She said, "My husband has become your sannyasin. If he
really wants to become a sannyasin he should become a Jaina sannyasin. Then
at least he will be respectable. Becoming your sannyasin is dangerous. Now
people have started thinking that he has gone crazy. Even his own children
are suspicious. I myself think that something has gone wrong with him."
Now she is ready if he becomes a Jaina sannyasin, although by becoming a
Jaina sannyasin he will have to leave the house, the family. The wife is
ready; she told me, "I am ready. If he has to leave the home and the
children and me, we will manage. It will be difficult, but we will manage.
By becoming your sannyasin he is not leaving the house -- that is the
problem. Now the neighbors are asking,'What kind of sannyasin is he? Still
living with the family, still living with the wife and the children, still
going to work? What kind of sannyasin is he?'
"I am being tortured," she said, "continuously ridiculed. I am ready if he
leaves the home; it's okay, we will manage. It will be difficult, it is
going to be financially difficult, but we will manage. We will be poor, but
that's okay. At least we can keep our heads proud, high. "
You see, if you become a traditional sannyasin your parents may not be so
angry. In fact they may enjoy. People will say, "Look, your son has become a
great sannyasin. You are fortunate -- the tree is known by the fruit. Look,
your son... such a great sannyasin. He has renounced the world." And your
father will feel proud, mother will feel proud. Even your wife, who will be
suffering very much because you have left her, even she will feel proud that
she is the wife of somebody who has renounced the world, a traditional
value. And everybody will be thinking highly of you and your family.
If you become my sannyasin you are crazy, you are mad: "You have fallen in
this man's trap and he is just hypnotizing people and doing nothing. You are
a victim." Everybody will advise you, "Why don't you go to the psychiatrist
and take some help? Why don't you go to the mountains and rest a little?"
Yes, Ghurye, you are right, it may ruin your career. It is dangerous.
In the days of Mahavira it was dangerous to become a Jaina sannyasin. Just
wait two thousand years; then my sannyasins will be respected. It will help
their career By that time everything will be dead; whatsoever I am saying
will have lost all fire, all rebellion, things will have become formal.
Then, Ghurye, you will have to wait at least two thousand years. Then you
can become my sannyasin without ruining your career, and your wife will be
happy, and your children and your parents, and everybody will be happy --
but then you have to wait for two thousand years.
If you want to become a sannyasin right now there are going to be problems.
But a real man is born out of facing problems and challenges.
Never decide for the career. Think of consciousness, because that is the
only richness. And think of the inner journey. And always be authentic to
yourself. For no other consideration should you compromise. A compromising
person has no soul. The more you compromise, the less soul you have. By and
by you are just nothing, just apparently alive, but deep down, dead. Beware
of it.
Ghurye has been asking many questions; I have not answered him yet. This is
the first question I am answering. And I am answering this question to
provoke in him a respect for his own soul. Nothing else is more important.
If you cannot respect your own longing, then you are disrespectful to God.
If you cannot assert yourself in the way you want to be, then you are a
coward, then you are compromising; then you will never have a centering, you
will never have an integrated being, you will never find yourself
crystallized. You will always remain a hazy, cloudy thing.
The soul is born through such sacrifices. I am not saying that there will
be no problem. There will be problems -- many more than you can think of
right now, many more than you can even imagine. Friends will turn into
enemies, your own family will start looking at you as if you have fallen
from grace, and certainly your colleagues wherever you work will start
putting you out of their circle, as if you are an outsider, a foreigner.
But all these problems are worth facing. These are the steps of the temple
of God. This is real sacrifice, austerity. And slowly, slowly when one
passes through such fire, the gold that you are carrying within you becomes
pure; and only through the purity of your inner gold, one day, the golden
flower blooms.
I am all for individual freedom, and freedom is the door to God. What do I
mean by freedom? To live fearlessly is freedom, to drop fear is freedom.
Fear creates our chains.
Now you are afraid of the job, career, family, neighborhood. These are all
chains made of your fear. Drop these chains. Live in freedom. Live
authentically the life you really want to live. Don't try to be somebody
else, just be yourself.
A great Hasidic mystic, Josiah, was dying, and somebody told him, "Master,
why don't you pray now to Moses, because now you are on your deathbed? Pray
to Moses. He will help you in the other world. "
Josiah opened his eyes and said, "Stop all this nonsense! God is not going
to ask me, 'Josiah, why were you not Moses?' He will ask me, 'Josiah, why
were you not Josiah?' Moses has nothing to do with this. I have to answer
for myself, why I was not myself, why I betrayed my innermost being. That's
the question!"
Freedom means don't betray yourself, whatsoever the cost. Remain true to
yourself, and you will be true to God.
A parable:
In the land of the moths, there is the legend of the Old One. It tells that
one night, when the then very young moth was flying about with his friends,
he happened to look up and saw a wondrous white light hanging between the
branches of a tree. It was in fact the moon, but as all moths are so
preoccupied with the candles, street lamps, and other lights that they are
constantly circling, our hero and his friends had never seen it before.
With this sight came a sudden and firm resolution: our moth would never
again settle for flying around anything else but the moon. And so every
night, when the moths would venture out from their resting places and each
head for a suitable light, our moth headed upwards towards the heavens.
But the moon, although it seemed always so near, remained always beyond his
finite capacity for flight. He never, however, allowed his frustrations to
overcome him, and in fact his efforts, though unsuccessful in making him
into a lunar astronaut, yielded him one unexpected dividend.
For while his friends and family, his neighbors and co-citizens of
moth-land all reviled and ridiculed him, they all preceded him to the grave
in the fiery incinerating death of their kind, burned to a crisp in one of
those accessible flames they had set as their goal.
The Old One died peacefully at a very ripe age, beneath the cool white
shine of his Beloved.
Sannyas means you have become interested in the moon. Sannyas means you
have become interested in attaining the impossible. Sannyas means now you
are entering into a journey for the unknown shore. It is dangerous, but
through this danger one is reborn. Through this impossible longing --
passion for the impossible -- something integrates in you.
Other moths are bound to be angry with you. They will ridicule you because
you are insulting them. They feel the insult because they are only living
around candles and street lights, and they think that is the only goal worth
achieving in life -- to go round and round around a candle and then die.
The people who are living for money and power and prestige are going round
and round around street lamps. They will naturally be offended by you when
you raise your heads towards the moon. They will ridicule you, they will
call you mad. They will say, "Nobody has ever attained it. Don't be foolish.
Be normal. Come. How beautiful is this candle, and this street light!"
Sannyas means love for the moon. That very love transforms. It is not a
question of whether you reach to the moon or not: that very love transmutes,
that very love becomes the alchemy. You are no more part of the ordinary
world, you start living in an extraordinary world. The poetry is born in
you, the music is heard of the unknown, some dance starts happening. That's
what God is all about. Sannyas is an invitation for God to become a guest in
your being. Sannyas is readiness to be a host for God.
The last question:
Question 4
WHY IS THE WEST BECOMING MORE AND MORE INTERESTED IN MEDITATION? AND ALSO,
WHY IS THE EAST LOSING INTEREST IN ITS OWN SPIRITUAL TREASURES?
A lawyer made his way to the edge of the excavation where a gang was
working, and called the name of Timothy O'Toole.
"Who is wanting me?" inquired a heavy voice.
"Mr. O'Toole," the lawyer asked, "did you come from Castlebar, County
Mayo?"
"I did that."
"And your mother was named Bridget and your father Michael?"
"They was."
"It is my duty then," said the lawyer, "to inform you, Mr. O'Toole, that
your Aunt Mary has died in Iowa, leaving you an estate of 60,000 dollars."
There was a short silence below and then a lively commotion.
"Are you coming, Mr. O'Toole?" the lawyer called down.
"In one minute," was bellowed in answer. "I have just stopped to lick the
foreman." It required just six months of extremely riotous living for
O'Toole to expend all of the 60,000 dollars. His chief endeavor was to
satisfy a huge inherited thirst. Then he went back to his job. And there,
presently the lawyer sought him out again.
"It is your Uncle Patrick this time, Mr. O'Toole," the lawyer explained.
"He has died in Texas and left you 40,000 dollars."
O'Toole leaned heavily on his pick and shook his head in great weariness.
"I don't think I can take it," he declared. "I am not as strong as I once
was, and I misdoubt me that I could go through all that money and live."
That's what has happened in the West. Man in the West has succeeded in
attaining to all the affluence that the whole of humanity has been longing
for down the ages. The West has succeeded materially in becoming rich, and
now it is too weary, too tired. The journey has taken all its soul. The
journey has finished the Western man. Outwardly all is available, but the
contact with the inner is lost. Now everything that man needs is there, but
the man is no more there. Possessions are there, but the master has
disappeared. A great imbalance has happened. Richness is there, but man is
not feeling rich at all; man is feeling, on the contrary, very impoverished,
very poor.
Think of this paradox: when you are outwardly rich only then do you become
aware of your inner poverty, in contrast. When you are outwardly poor you
never become aware of your inner poverty, because there is no contrast. You
write with white chalk on blackboards, not on white boards. Why? Because
only on blackboards will it show. The contrast is needed.
When you are outwardly rich, then suddenly a great awareness happens that
"Inwardly I am poor, a beggar." And now a hopelessness also comes as a
shadow that "All is attained that we had thought -- all imagination and
fantasies fulfilled -- and nothing has happened out of it, no contentment,
no bliss."
The West is bewildered. Out of this bewilderment a great desire is arising:
how to have contact with one's self again.
Meditation is nothing but getting your roots again into your inner world,
into your interiority. Hence the West is becoming very much interested in
meditation, and very much interested in the Eastern treasures.
The East was also interested in meditation when the East was rich; this has
to be understood. That's why I am not against richness and I don't think
that poverty has any spirituality in it. I am utterly against poverty
because whenever a country becomes poor it loses contact with all
meditations, all spiritual efforts. Whenever a country becomes poor
outwardly, it becomes unaware of the inner poverty.
That's why on the Indian faces you can see a kind of contentment that is
not found in the West. It is not real contentment; it is just unawareness of
the inner poverty. Indians think, "Look at the anxiety, anguish, and the
tension on the Western faces. Although we are poor, we are inwardly very
content." That is utter nonsense; they are not contented. I have been
watching thousands of people -- they are not contented. But one thing is
certainly there, they are not aware of the discontent, because to be aware
of the discontent outer richness is needed. Without outer richness nobody
becomes aware of the inner discontent. And there are enough proofs of it.
All the avataras of the Hindus were kings or sons of kings -- kings or
princes. All the Jaina teerthankaras, all the Jaina prophets, were kings;
and so was Buddha. All the three great traditions of India give ample proof.
Why did Buddha become discontented, why did he start a search for
meditation? Because he was rich. He lived in affluence; he lived in all that
was possible, all the comforts, all the material gadgets. Suddenly he became
aware. And he was not very old when he became aware; he was only twenty-nine
when he became aware that there is a dark hole inside. Light is outside;
hence it shows your inner darkness. Just a little dirt on a white shirt and
it shows. That's what happened.
He escaped from the palace. That's what happened to Mahavira; he also
escaped from a palace. It was not happening to a beggar. There were beggars
also in Buddha's time. In fact, the story is that Buddha renounced the world
when he saw a beggar for the first time, and an old man, and a dead body,
and a sannyasin. Beggars were there.
Buddha was going to participate in a youth festival, he was to inaugurate
it. From his golden chariot, he saw a beggar -- for the first time --
because his father had managed his whole life that Buddha should never see a
beggar, or an ill man, or an old man, or a dead man; because astrologers had
told the father when Buddha was born that if he ever saw these things he
would immediately renounce the world, so don't allow him to see them. So
wherever Buddha would move to, beggars would be removed, old people would be
removed or forced to remain in their houses, not to come out. Even in
Buddha's garden no dead leaf was allowed. Every dead leaf was removed during
the night so in the morning when Buddha would come there he could only see
youth, young leaves, young flowers. He had never seen a flower withering.
When he saw a beggar for the first time... And the parable is beautiful; it
says the gods became worried: "The father is succeeding too much.
Twenty-nine years have passed, and Buddha has the capacity to become one of
the most awakened persons in the world." The gods became worried: "The
management of the father is such that he may never come across a beggar or
an old man; he may miss." So they pretended -- one god walked like a beggar,
another like an old man, another became like a dead man, another like a
sannyasin.
Beggars were there but they didn't renounce. They had nothing to renounce;
they were contented. Buddha became discontented.
When this country was rich, many more people were interested in meditation;
in fact, all the people were interested in meditation. Sooner or later they
would start thinking of the moon, of the beyond, of the inner.
Now the country is poor, so poor that there is no contrast of the inner and
the outer. The inner is poor, the outer is poor. The inner and the outer are
in perfect harmony -- both are poor. That's why you see a kind of
contentment on Indian faces that is not true contentment. And because of
this people have become accustomed to thinking that poverty has something
spiritual in it.
Poverty is worshiped in India. That is one of the reasons why I am
condemned continuously, because I am not in favor of any kind of poverty.
Poverty is not spirituality; poverty is the cause of the disappearance of
spirituality.
I would like the whole world to become as affluent as possible. The more
people are affluent, the more they will become spiritual. They will have to;
they will not be able to avoid it. And only then does real contentment
arise.
When you can create inner richness and there comes a moment when again a
harmony happens -- outer richness meeting inner richness -- then there is
real contentment. When outer poverty meets inner poverty, then there is
false contentment. Harmony is possible in these two ways. The outer and
inner in harmony, and one feels contented. India looks contented because
there is poverty on both sides of the fence. There is perfect harmony, the
outer and inner are in tune; but this is ugly contentment, this is really
lack of life, lack of vitality. This is a stupid kind of contentment, dull,
insipid.
The West is bound to become interested in meditation, there is no way to
avoid it. That's why Christianity is losing its hold on the Western mind,
because Christianity has not developed the science of meditation in any way.
It has remained a very mediocre religion; so is Judaism.
The West was poor: that is the reason. Up to now the West has lived in
poverty. When the East was rich the West was poor. Judaism, Christianity and
Mohammedanism, all the three non-Indian religions, were born in poverty.
They could not develop meditation techniques, there was no need. They have
remained the religions of the poor.
Now the West has become rich and there is a disparity. The Western
religions were born in poverty; they have nothing to give to the rich man.
For the rich man they look childish, they don't satisfy. They CAN'T satisfy
him. The Eastern religions were born in richness; that's why the Western
mind is becoming more and more interested in Eastern religions. Yes, the
religion of Buddha is having great impact; Zen is spreading like fire. Why?
It was born out of richness.
There is a tremendous similarity between the Western psychology of the
contemporary man and the psychology of Buddhism. The West in is the same
state as Buddha was when he became interested in meditation. It was a rich
man's search. And so is the case with Hinduism, so is the case with Jainism.
These three great Indian religions were born out of affluence, hence the
West is bound to be attracted to these Eastern religions.
The East is losing contact with its own religions. It cannot afford to
understand Buddha -- it is a poor country. You will be surprised, poor
Indians are being converted to Christianity. Rich Americans are being
converted to Buddhism, Hinduism, Vedanta, and the untouchables, the poor,
the poorest of the poor in India, are becoming Christians. Do you see the
point? These religions have a certain appeal for the poor. But they don't
have any future, because sooner or later the whole world is going to become
rich.
You will find many Indians here either, because I don't praise poverty, I
have no respect for poverty. Man has to given both kinds of richnesses. Why
not both? Science has developed the technology to make you outwardly rich.
Religion has developed the technology to make you inwardly rich: that is
Yoga, Tantra, Taoism, Sufism, Hassidism -- these are the technologies of the
inner.
A story:
The central figure of this story is one of those persons who accepts
everything that happens as manifestation of a divine power. Not for him, he
said, to question the workings of a Divine Providence.
All his life misfortune had been his, yet never once did he complain. He
married, and his wife ran away with the hired man. He had a daughter, and
the daughter was deceived by a villian. He had a son, and the son was
lynched. A fire burned down his barn, a cyclone blew away his home, a
hailstorm destroyed his crops, and the banker foreclosed on his mortgage,
taking his farm. Yet at each stroke of misfortune he knelt and gave thanks
to "God Almighty for his interminable mercy."
After a time, penniless but still submissive to the decrees from one high,
he landed in the county poorhouse. One day the overseer sent him out to plow
a potato field. A thunderstrom came up but was passing over when, without
warning, a bolt of lightning descended from the sky. It melted the
plowshare, stripped most of his clothing from him, singed off his beard,
branded his naked back with the initials of a neighbouring cowman, and
hurled him through a barbed wire fence.
When he recovered consciousness he got slowly to his knees, clasped his
hands and raised his eyes towards heaven. Then, for the first time, he
asserted himself:
"Lord," he said, "this is getting to be plumb ridiculous!"
This is the situation of the East: "This is getting to be plumb
ridiculous!" But the East goes on thanking God, goes on feeling grateful.
There is nothing to feel grateful for any more! The East is utterly poor,
ill, starved; there is nothing to be grateful for. But the East has
forgotten how to assert, the East has forgotten to do anything about his
condition.
So the East cannot meditate. The East is living almost in a kind of
unconsiousness. It is too hungry to meditate, too poor to pray. Its only
interest is in bread, shelter, clothing; so when the Christian missionary
comes and opens a hospital or opens a school, the Indians are very much
impressed -- this is spirituality. When I start teaching about meditation
they are not interested, not only not interested, they are against it: "What
kind of spirituality is this?" And I understand -- they need bread, they
need shelter, they need clothes.
But it is because of their mind that they are suffering. On the one hand
they need bread, shelter, clothes, better houses, better roads; and on the
other hand they go on worshiping poverty. They are in a double bind.
The East cannot yet meditate. First it needs scientific technology to make
it a little physically better. Just as the West needs religious technology,
the East needs scientific technology.
And I am all for one world, where the West can fulfill the needs of the
East and the East can fulfill the needs of the West. The East and the West
have lived apart too long; there is no need any more. The East should not be
the East any more and the West should not be the West any more. We have come
to that critical moment where this whole earth can become one -- should
become one -- because it can survive only if it becomes one.
The days of the nations are over, the days of divisions are over, the days
of the politicians are over. We are moving in a tremendously new world, a
new phase of humanity, and the phase is that there can be only one world
now, only one single humanity. And then there will be a tremendous release
of energies.
The East has treasures, the religious technologies, and the West has
treasures, the scientific technologies. And if both can meet, this very
world can become a paradise. Now there is no need to ask for another world;
we are capable of creating the paradise here on this earth, for the first
time. And if we don't create it, then except for us, nobody else is
responsible.
I am for one world, one humanity, and ultimately one science which will
take care of both -- a meeting of religion and science -- one science which
will take care of the inner and the outer, both.
That's what I am trying to do here. It is a meeting place of East and West;
it is a womb where the new humanity can be conceived, can be born. You are
fortunate. You may not be aware of it, that you are participating in
something of eternal value a great experiment upon which the whole future of
humanity depends. If you become more conscious of it, it will be better,
because you will be more helpful then.
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