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VIGYAN BHAIRAV TANTRA VOL2
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VIGYAN BHAIRAV TANTRA VOL2
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THE
OTHER NIGHT YOU SAID THAT PHILOSOPHIES ARE ANTI-MEDITATION. BUT ON THE OTHER
HAND YOU AGREE THAT THE EASTERN PHILOSOPHIES SUCH AS TANTRA, YOGA AND VEDANT,
ARE THE WRITINGS OF ENLIGHTENED SAGES. WHY DO THE ENLIGHTENED SAGES LEAVE
BEHIND THEM A STRONG STRUCTURE OF PHILOSOPHICAL CONTEMPLATION, IF
PHILOSOPHIES ARE ANTI-MEDITATION?
Philosophy is not darshan. Darshan is the eastern term. Darshan means
perception, philosophy means thinking. Herman Hesse has coined a new word to
translate darshan into western languages. He calls it `philosia' -- `sia'
from `to see'.
Philosophy means to think, and darshan means to see. Both are basically
different; not only different, but diametrically opposite. Because when you
are thinking you cannot see. You are so filled with thoughts that perception
is blurred, perception is clouded. When thinking ceases, you become capable
of seeing. Then your eyes are opened, they become unclouded. Perception
happens only when thinking ceases.
For Socrates, Plato and Aristotle, and the whole western tradition,
thinking is the base. For Kanad, Kapil, Patanjali, Buddha, and the whole
eastern tradition, seeing is the base. So Buddha is not a philosopher, not
at all; neither is Patanjali, nor Kapil or Kanad. They are not philosophers.
They have seen the truth; they have not thought about it.
Remember well that you only think when you cannot see. If you can see,
there is no reason to think. Thinking is always in ignorance. Thinking is
not knowledge, because when you know, there is no need to think. When you
don't know, you will the gap by thinking. Thinking is groping in the dark.
So eastern philosophies are not philosophies. To use the word philosophy for
eastern darshan is absolutely wrong. Darshan means to see, to attain the eye,
to realize, to know -- immediately, directly, without the mediation of
thinking and thought.
Thinking can never lead to the unknown. How can it lead? It is impossible.
The very process of thinking has to be understood. When you think, what do
you really do? You go on repeating old thoughts, memories. If I ask you a
question -- does God exist? -- you can think about it. What will you do? All
that you have heard, all that you have read, all that you have accumulated
about God, you will repeat. Even if you come to a new conclusion, the
newness of it will only be apparent, not real. It will be simply a
combination of old thoughts. You can combine many old thoughts and create a
new structure, but that structure will be apparently new, not new at all.
Thinking can never come to any original truth. Thinking is never original;
it cannot be. It is always of the past, of the old, of the known. Thinking
cannot touch the unknown; it is repetitively moving in the circle of the
known. You don't know truth, you don't know God. What can you do? You can
think about it. You will move in circles, around and around. You can never
come to any experience of it.
So the eastern emphasis is not on thinking, but on seeing. You cannot think
about God, but you can see. You cannot come to any conclusion about God, but
you can realize. It can become an experience. You cannot get to it through
information, through knowledge, through scriptures, through theories and
philosophies; no, you cannot get to it. You can get into it only if you
throw all knowledge. All that you have heard and read and collected, all the
dust that your mind has collected, the whole past, must be put aside. Then
your eyes are fresh, then your consciousness is unclouded, and then you can
see it.
It is here and now -- you are clouded. You have not to go somewhere else to
find the divine or the truth -- it is here. It is right there where you are.
And it has always been so -- only you are clouded, your eyes are closed. So
the question is not to think more; the question is how to come to a non-thinking
consciousness. That's why I say that meditation and philosophy are anti each
other. Philosophy thinks, meditation comes to a no-thinking consciousness.
And eastern philosophies are not really philosophies. In the West,
philosophies exist; in the East, only religious realizations.
Of course, when a Buddha happens, or a Kanad or a Patanjali happens, when
someone comes to realize the absolute, he makes statements about it. Those
statements are different from the Aristotelan statements, from western
philosophical conclusions. The difference is this: a Kanad, a Buddha, first
comes to realize -- the realization is the first thing -- and then he makes
statements about it. Experience is primary, and then he expresses it.
Aristotle, Hegel and Kant, they think, and then through thinking and logical
argument and dialectics, they reach particular conclusions. These
conclusions are reached through thinking, through mind, not through any
practice of meditation. Then they make assertions, then they make statements.
The source is different.
For a Buddha, his statements are only as a vehicle to communicate. He never
says that through his communication you will achieve the truth. If you can
understand Buddha, that doesn't mean you have achieved the truth; that
simply means you have gathered knowledge. You will have to pass through
meditations, deep ecstasies, deep pools of the mind, only then will you come
to the truth.
So truth is reached through a certain existential experience. It is
existential, it is not mental. You must change to know it and to be it. If
you remain the same and go on collecting information, you will become a
great scholar, a philosopher, but you will not be enlightened. You will
remain the same man; there will have been no mutation.
That's why I said that philosophy is one dimension Meditation is quite the
contrary, the very opposite, the polar-opposite dimension. So don't think
about life; rather, live it in depth. And don't think about ultimate
problems; rather, enter this very moment in the ultimate. And the ultimate
is not in the future. It is always there, timelessly there.
Someone else has also asked a similar question. He has asked:
Question 2
CAN PROBLEMS BE SOLVED THROUGH THINKING?
Yes, certain problems can be solved through thinking -- only those problems
which are created by thinking can be solved by it. But no real problem can
be solved by it, no lived problem can be solved by it. It is not created by
it; it is there in life itself. Thinking will not be of much help. Only in
one way can thinking help you, and that is that through thinking and
thinking and thinking, you will stumble upon the truth that thinking is
futile. And the moment you realize that thinking is futile for existential
problems, it has helped you in a way. It is through thinking that you have
come to this realization.
But problems which are created by thinking can be solved by thinking itself.
For example, a mathematical problem: it can be solved by thinking, because
the whole mathematics is created by thinking. For example, if there is no
man on earth, will there be mathematics? There will be no mathematics. With
the disappearance of human mind, mathematics will disappear. There is no
mathematics in life and existence. In the garden, trees are there, but when
you count ONE, TWO, THREE, three trees are not there, because the THREE is a
mental thing. The trees are there, but the figures are not there. The figure
three is in your mind. If you are not there, the trees will be there, but
not three trees, only trees. The THREE is a quality given by the mind, it is
a projected quality.
Mind creates mathematics, so any problem of mathematics will be solved by
mind, it will be solved by thinking. Remember, you cannot solve a
mathematical problem through non-thinking. No meditation will be of help,
because meditation will dissolve the mind, and with the mind the whole
mathematics will dissolve. So there are problems which are created by the
mind; they can be solved. But there are problems which are not created by
the mind, but are existential. Those problems cannot be solved by the mind.
You will have to move deep in existence itself.
For example, love. It is an existential problem. You cannot solve it by
thinking; rather, you will get more puzzled. The more you think, the less
you will be in touch with the source of the problem. Meditation will be of
help. It will give you insight, it will lead you to the unconscious roots of
the problem. If you think about it, you will remain on the surface.
So remember, life problems cannot be solved by thinking. On the contrary,
really, because of too much thinking you are missing all solutions, and more
problems are created. For example, death. Death is not a problem created by
thinking; you cannot solve it by thinking. Whatsoever you think, how can you
solve it? You can console, and you can think that consolation is a solution
-- it is not. You can deceive yourself; that's possible through thinking.
You can create explanations, and through explanations you can think that you
have solved it. You can escape the problem through thinking, but you cannot
solve it. And see the distinction clearly.
For example, death is there. Your beloved dies, or your friend, or your
daughter -- the death is there. Now what can you do? You can think about it.
You can think and you can say that the soul is immortal -- because you have
read it. In the Upanishads it is said that the soul is immortal, only the
body dies. You don't know it at all, because if you really know, there is no
problem -- or is there a problem? If you really know that the soul is
immortal, then death has not occurred; there is no problem at all. But the
problem is there: death has occurred, and you are disturbed and deep in
sorrow. Now you want to escape this sorrow. Now somehow you want to forget
this sorrow.
You can take the explanation that the soul is immortal -- now this is a
trick. Not that the soul is not immortal -- I am not saying that -- but for
you this is a trick. You are trying to deceive yourself. You are in sorrow,
and now you want to escape this sorrow, so this explanation will be helpful.
Now you can console yourself that the soul is immortal, no one dies, only
the body -- just as if one changes the clothes, or one changes the abode --
so from one house to another the soul has gone. You can go on thinking, but
you don't know anything about it. You have heard, you have collected
information; but through these explanations you will be at ease. You can
forget the death.
Really this is no solution to the problem. Nothing has been solved. The
next day someone else will die and the same problem will be there. Again
someone will die and the same problem will be there. And deep down you know
that you will have to die. You cannot escape death -- and the fear is there.
But you can go on postponing, and you can go on escaping through
explanations. This won't do.
Death is an existential problem. You cannot solve it through thinking. You
can create only fake solutions. What to do then? Then there is another
dimension -- the dimension of meditation; not of thinking, not of mentation.
You just encounter the situation.
Death has occurred. Your beloved is dead. Don't move in thinking. Don't
bring the Upanishads and the Gita and the Bible. Don't ask the Christs and
Buddhas. Leave them alone. Death is there: face, encounter. Be with this
situation totally. Don't think about it. What can you think? You can only
repeat old rubbish. The death is such a new phenomenon, it is so unknown,
that your knowledge is not going to help in any way. So put aside your mind.
Be in a deep meditation with death.
Don't do anything, because what can you do which can be of any help? You
don't know. So be in ignorance. Don't bring false knowledge, borrowed
knowledge. Death is there; you be with it. Face death with total presence.
Don't move in thinking, because then you are escaping from the situation,
you are becoming absent from here. Don't think. Be present with the death.
Sadness will be there, sorrow will be there, a heavy burden will be on you
-- let it be there. It is part -- part of life, and part of maturity, and
part of the ultimate realization. Remain with it, totally present. This will
be meditation, and you will come to a deep understanding of death. Then
death itself becomes eternal life.
But don't bring the mind and knowledge. Remain with death; then death will
reveal itself to you, then you will know what death is. You will move into
the inner mansions of it. Then death will take you to the very center of
life -- because death is the very center of life. It is not against life; it
is the very process of life. But mind brings the contradiction that life and
death are opposites. Then you go on thinking, and because the root is false,
the opposition is false, you can never come to any conclusion which can be
true and real.
Whenever there is a lived problem, be with the problem without your mind --
that's what I mean by meditation -- and just being there with the problem
will solve it. And if you have really been there, death will not occur to
you again, because then you know what death is.
We never do this -- never with love, never with death, never with anything
that is authentically real. We always move in thoughts, and thoughts are the
falsifiers. They are borrowed, not your own. They cannot liberate you. Only
the truth which is your own can become your liberation. And you can only
come to your own truth through a very silent presence. With any problem,
that fails. Thinking will not solve the real problems, but thinking can
solve unreal problems created by thinking itself -- because those problems
follow the rules of logic. Life doesn't follow the rules of logic. Life has
its own hidden laws, and you cannot force logic on them.
One point more about this: wherever you bring the mind, the mind dissects,
analyzes. Reality is one, and mind always divides. And when you have dived a
reality, you have falsified it. Now you can struggle for your whole life --
nothing will be achieved, because basically the reality was one and the mind
divided into two, and now you are working with the division.
For example, as I was saying, life and death are one, but for the mind they
are two and death is the enemy of life. It is not, because life cannot exist
without death. If life cannot exist without death, how can death be the
enemy? It is the basic situation. It makes life possible. Life grows in it;
it is the soul. Without it life is impossible. But mind, thinking, divides
it and puts it as a polar opposite. Then you can go on thinking about.
Whatsoever you think will be false, because in the beginning you have
committed a sin -- the sin of division.
When you meditate, divisions disappear. When you meditate, there cannot be
divisions, because how can you divide in silence?
We are here. Everyone is thinking in his own mind something or other; then
we are different, everyone is different, because your thought is yours, and
my thought is mine. In my mind I have my own dreams and you have your own.
There are many individuals here, but if we all are meditating -- neither you
are thinking nor I am thinking, the thinking has ceased -- then there will
not be so many individuals. Really, there will not be individuals at all. If
we are all meditating then limitations have disappeared.
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In the beginning the first trouble will be that you will be looking at, but
you will not be present. This is the first barrier. Your mind will move.
Your eyes will be fixed, your mind will be moving -- there will be no
meeting of the eyes and the mind. This will be the first difficulty. If you
win over it, the second difficulty will be that gazing with no movement, you
will fall asleep. You will move into auto-hypnosis, you will be hypnotized
by yourself. That's natural, because our mind knows only two states: either
the constant movement or sleep. The mind knows only two states naturally:
constant movement, thinking, or falling into sleep. And meditation is a
third state.
The third state of meditation means your mind is as silent as a deep sleep,
and as alert and aware as in thinking -- both these must be present. You
must be alert, completely alert, and as silent as if deep in sleep. So
Patanjali's Yoga Sutras say that meditation is a sort of deep sleep, with
only one difference -- that you are alert. Patanjali equates sushupti and
samadhi: deep sleep and ultimate meditation. The difference is only that in
deep sleep you are not aware, and in meditation you are aware, but the
quality of both is deep silence -- unrippled, unwavering silence, unmoving
silence.
In the beginning it may happen that through staring you may fall asleep. So
if you have become capable of bringing your mind to your focus and the mind
is not moving, then remain alert, don't fall asleep. Because if sleep comes,
you have fallen in the abyss, the ditch. Just between these two ditches --
constant thinking and sleep -- is the narrow bridge of being in meditation.
Question 4
YOU HAVE SAID THAT SCIENCE EXPERIMENTS WITH THE OBJECTIVE, AND RELIGION
WITH THE SUBJECTIVE. BUT NOW THERE IS A NEW GROWING SCIENCE, PSYCHOLOGY, OR
MORE ACCURATELY, DEPTH PSYCHOLOGY, WHICH IS BOTH SUBJECTIVE AND OBJECTIVE.
SO SCIENCE AND RELIGION MEET IN DEPTH PSYCHOLOGY.
They cannot meet. Depth psychology, or the study of psychic phenomena, is
again objective. And the method of depth psychology is the method of
objective science.
Try to see the distinction. For example, you can study meditation in a
scientific way. You can observe someone who is meditating, but then this has
become objective for you. You meditate and I observe. I can bring all the
scientific instruments to observe what is happening to you, what is
happening there in you, but the study remains objective. I am outside. I am
not meditating. You are meditating; you are an object to me.
Then I can try to understand what is happening to you. Even through
instruments much can be known about you, but that will remain objective and
scientific. So really, whatsoever I am studying is not the real thing that
is happening to you, but the effects that your body is recording.
You cannot penetrate a Buddha, what is happening to him, because really
nothing is happening there. The deepest center of an enlightened man is
nothingness. Nothing is happening there. And if nothing is happening, how
can you study it? You can study something. You can study the Alpha waves;
what is happening to the mind, to the body, to the chemistry, you can
understand. But really deep down, when someone becomes enlightened, there is
not anything happening. All happening has ceased.
This is what is meant -- the world has ceased. Now there is no sansar, no
happening. He is as if he is not. That's why Buddha says, `Now I have become
a no-atman, no-self. There is no one inside me. I am just an emptiness. The
flame has disappeared, and the house is vacant.' Nothing is happening. What
can you record about it? At the most you can record that nothing is
happening. If something happens it can be recorded objectively.
The method of science remains objective, and science is very much afraid of
the subjective, for many reasons. Science and the scientific mind cannot
believe in the subjective, because firstly, it is private and individual and
no one can enter in it. It cannot become public and collective, and unless
something is public and collective, nothing can be said about it. The person
who is saying may be deceived, or may be deceiving others. He may be a liar.
Or, he may be just in an illusion, not a liar. He may be thinking and
believing that this has happened to him, and this may be just a delusion, a
self-deception.
So for science the truth must be objective. Others must be able to
participate in it, so we can judge whether it is happening or not. Secondly,
it must be that it can be repeated; it must be repeatable. If we heat water
it evaporates at a certain degree -- it must be repeatable. So we repeat and
repeat and again and again it evaporates at a certain degree. If it
evaporates only once at a hundred degrees and never gain, or sometimes at
ninety and sometimes at eighty, it cannot become a scientific fact. It must
be repeatable, and the same conclusion should be achieved through many
repeated experiments.
But the subjective realization is not repeatable -- it is not even
predictable. And you cannot invite it; it happens. You cannot force it. You
may achieve a deep meditation, you may have a very elated peak experience,
but if someone says, `Repeat it here,' you may not be able to repeat it. On
the contrary, because someone says, and you make an effort to repeat it,
this very effort may become the barrier. Even the presence of observers may
be distracting. You may not be able to repeat it.
Science needs objective, repeatable experiments. And psychology, if it
wants to be a science, must follow scientific rules. Religion is subjective.
It is not concerned with proving any fact; rather, it is concerned with
coming to an individual experiencing of it. And the deepest must remain
individual, and the ultimate must remain private; it cannot become
collective. Because unless everyone has come to the status of an
enlightened one, it cannot become collective. You have to grow to achieve
it.
So science and religion really cannot meet, because their approaches are
different. Religion is absolutely private -- the concern of the individual
with himself. Because of this, those countries which in the past have been
more religious than others have remained individualistic. For example,
India. India is individualistic. Sometimes it appears even selfish. Everyone
is concerned with himself, his own growth, his own enlightenment; not
concerned with others, indifferent to others, indifferent to society, social
conditions, poverty, slavery. Everyone is concerned with himself, with
growing to the ultimate peak. It also looks selfish.
Western countries are more socialistic, less individualistic. That's why
the very concept of communism was impossible with the Indian mind. We have
given a Buddha and a Patanjali, but we couldn't give a Marx. It had to come
from the West where the society, the collective whole, is more important
than the individual; where science is more important than religion; where
that which happens objectively is more important than that which happens in
your absolute privacy. That which happens in the privacy is dream-like for
the West.
Look at this: that which happens publicly we have called maya, illusion.
Shankara says the whole world is illusion; only that which happens deep down
within you, the ultimate, the Brahma that happens there is real, and
everything is unreal. Quite the opposite is the western scientific attitude:
that which happens within you is illusory; that which happens outside is the
real. The reality is there outside, and the dream-world is there inside.
These are the two attitudes -- so different, the approach so diametrically
opposite, that there can be no meeting. There is no need also. Their
dimensions are different, their spheres are different. They never trespass
on each other; there is no conflict at all. And there need be no conflict.
Science works with the objective world, and religion works with the
individual, subjective world. They never cross each other. There cannot be
any conflict.
And to me, when you are working with the outside world, work with a
scientific attitude. When you are working with yourself, work with a
religious attitude. And don't create any conflict; there is no need. Don't
bring science for the inner world, and don't bring religion for the outer
world.
If you bring religion to the outer world, you will create chaos. In India
we have created it -- it is a mess. If you bring a scientific attitude for
the inner, you will create madness -- the West has created it. Now the West
is completely neurotic. And both have made the same mistake. Don't confuse
the two, and don't try to bring the outer to the inner, or the inner to the
outer. Let the subjective be subjective and let the objective be the
objective. While you move outwards be scientific and objective, and while
you move inwards be religious and subjective.
There is no need to create any conflict. There is none. The conflict arises
only because we want to impose one attitude on both realms. We want either
to be scientific totally, or to be religious totally -- that's wrong. With
the objective, the subjective approach will be false, dangerous, harmful,
and vice versa.
Question 5
YOU HAVE SPOKEN ABOUT SO MANY METHODS AND TECHNIQUES. THE YEARNING TO
SUCCEED IN THEM IS VERY GREAT. HOW CAN WE OVERCOME OUR GREAT IMPATIENCE?
Two things to be remembered. One: spirituality cannot be an outcome of
desire, because desire is the root cause of all our anxiety and anguish. And
you cannot direct your desires to the spiritual realm. But it happens, it is
natural, because we know only one movement -- that is desire. We desire the
things of the world. Someone desires riches, someone desires fame, someone
desires prestige and power, or something else. We desire things of the
world, and through this desiring we are frustrated.
And we are bound to be frustrated -- it is irrelevant whether a desire is
fulfilled or not. If it is not fulfilled, obviously we will be frustrated.
If it is fulfilled, then too we will be frustrated, because whenever a
desire is fulfilled, the desire is fulfilled, but the hope, the promise, is
not fulfilled. You can get as much wealth as you desire, but the wealth was
not desired really; something else was desired through it -- that is never
fulfilled.
You can achieve wealth, but the hope that was lingering around -- the dream
of happiness, of bliss, of some ecstatic life -- that is not fulfilled. If
wealth is not achieved you will feel frustrated. If wealth is achieved then
too you will feel frustrated, because the promise is not fulfilled, the
dream is not fulfilled. Everything is there. The means are there, and the
end has escaped. The end is always elusive.
Through desire one comes to deep frustration. When this frustration happens
you start looking for something absolutely other than this world --
religious yearning is born, a religious longing, but again you start
desiring. You become impatient; you want to achieve this and that. The mind
has not changed. The object of desire is different: it was wealth, now it is
meditation. It was power and prestige, now it is silence and peace. Before
it was something, now it is something else. But the mind, the mechanism, the
very working of your being, is the same. You were desiring A, now you are
desiring B -- but the desiring is there.
And desiring is the problem, not what you desire; that is not the problem.
What you desire is not the problem -- that you desire is the problem. Now
you are again desiring and you will be frustrated again. If you achieve, you
will be frustrated. If you don't achieve, you will be frustrated. The same
will happen to you, because you have not been able to see the point, you
have missed the point.
You cannot desire meditation, because meditation happens only when there is
no desire. You cannot desire liberation, nirvana, because it happens only in
a desireless state. It cannot be made an object of desire. So to me, and to
all those who know, desiring is the world; not that you desire worldly
things. Desiring, the very phenomenon of desiring, is the world.
And when you desire, impatience is bound to be there, because the mind
doesn't want to wait, the mind doesn't want to postpone. It is impatient.
Impatience is the shadow of desire. The more intense the desire, the more
impatience will be there. And impatience will create disturbance. So how
will you achieve meditation? Desire will create movement of the mind, and
then desiring will create impatience, and impatience will bring you to more
disturbances.
So it happens, and I observe it daily, that a person who was living a very
worldly life was not ordinarily so disturbed. When he starts to meditate, or
to seek the religious dimension, he becomes more disturbed, more than ever.
The reason is that now he has an even keener desire, more impatience. And
with the worldly things, things were so real and objective that he could
wait for them. They were always in his reach. Now in the spiritual realm
things are so elusive, so far away, they never seem to be in reach. Life
seems to be very short, and now the object of desires seems to be infinite
-- there is more impatience and then more disturbance. And with a disturbed
mind, how can you meditate?
So this is the puzzle. Try to understand it. If you are really frustrated
and you have come to feel that all that is outside is futile -- money or sex
or power or prestige just futile -- if you have come to this realization,
then a deeper realization is also needed. If these things are futile, then
desiring is even more futile: you desire and desire and nothing happens --
and your desiring creates the misery.
Look at the fact that desiring creates misery. If you don't desire, there
is no misery. So drop desiring. And don't create a new desire; simply drop
desiring. Don't create a spiritual desire. Don't say, `Now I am going to
seek God. Now I am going to find this and that. Now I am going to realize
the truth.' Don't create a new desire. If you create, it shows you have not
understood your misery.
Look at the misery that desire creates. Feel that desire is misery and drop
it. No effort is needed to drop it. Remember, if you make an effort you will
create another desire. That's why you need some other desire, because then
you can leave it. If some other desire is there, you can hang onto it. You
can cling to the new desire and you can leave the old one. To leave the old
is easy if some new is to be gained, but then you are missing the whole
point. Simply leave desire because it is misery, and don't create a new
desire.
Then there will be no impatience. Then meditation is not be practised
really; it will start happening to you, because a non-desiring mind is in
meditation. Then you can play with these techniques. And I say play. Then
you can play with these techniques; there is no practice. Practice is not a
good word the very word is wrong. Then you can play with these techniques,
and you can enjoy playing, because there is no desire to achieve something
and there is no impatience to reach somewhere.
You can play, and through play, when meditation is a play, everything is
possible. And everything is possible immediately, because you are not
disturbed, you are not impatient, you are not in any hurry, you are not
going somewhere, not reaching somewhere. You are here and now. If meditation
happens, okay. If it doesn't happen, it is still okay. Nothing is wrong with
you because there is no desire, no expectation, no future.
And remember, when meditation or no-meditation are similar to you,
meditation has happened to you. You have reached. Now the goal has come, the
ultimate has descended in you. This will look strange -- that I say don't
make meditation a practice, rather make it a play, a fun. Enjoy it while
doing it, not for any result.
But our minds are very serious, deadly serious. Even if we play, we make it
a serious thing. We make it a work, a duty. Play just like small children.
Play with meditation techniques, and then much more is possible through
them. Don't be serious about them; take them as fun. But we make everything
serious. Even if we are playing, we make it serious. And with religion we
have always been very serious. Religion has never been fun, that's why the
earth has remained irreligious. Religion must become a fun and a festivity,,
a celebration -- a celebration of the moment, enjoying whatsoever you are
doing; enjoying so much and so deeply that mind ceases.
If you really understand me, these 112 techniques will show you that
everything can become a technique -- if you really understand. That's why
there are 112. Everything can become a technique if you understand the
quality of the mind which brings meditation. Then whatsoever you do can
become a technique. Be playful, celebrate it, enjoy it. Move so deeply in it
that time ceases.
But time cannot cease if desire is there. Really, desire is time. When you
desire, future is needed, because desire cannot be fulfilled here and now.
Desire can be fulfilled only in the future somewhere, so you will need
future to move. And then time destroys you. You miss eternity. Eternity is
here.
So take meditation as a fun, a festivity, a celebration of anything. You
are just digging outside in the garden -- it can become a technique. Simply
dig and enjoy and celebrate the very act. Become the act and forget the
actor. The `I' is not there, only the action remains, and you are present to
the action, blissfully present. Then ecstasy is there -- no impatience, no
desire, and no motivation.
If you bring motivation, desire and impatience to meditation, you will
destroy the whole thing. And then the more you do, the more frustrated you
will feel. You will say, `I am doing so much and nothing is happening.'
People come to me. They say, `I am doing this and I am doing that, and for
so many months and for so many years, and nothing has happened.'
One seeker from Holland was here, and he was doing a particular technique
three hundred times every day. So he told me, `For two years I have been
doing this technique three hundred times every day. Not a single day has
been missed. I have left everything, because I have to do this three hundred
times every day -- and nothing has happened.' And he was just on the verge
of a nervous breakdown, because of the technique.
So I said, `The first thing is to leave this. Do anything whatsoever, but
don't do this. You will go mad.' He was deadly serious about it. It was a
life-and-death problem for him. It had to be achieved.
And he said, `Who knows how many days are left? Time is short, and I must
achieve it in this life. I don't want to be born again. Life is much a
misery.'
He will be born again and again. The way he is doing, he will go more and
more mad. But it is wrong -- the whole attitude is wrong. Take meditation as
a play, a fun, enjoy it, and then the very quality changes. Then it is not
something you are doing as a cause to gain some effect. No, you are enjoying
it here and now. It is the cause and it is the effect, both. It is the
beginning and it is the end.
And then you cannot miss meditation. You cannot miss it, it will happen to
you, because now you are ready to take it in. You are open. No one has said
that meditation should be taken as a fun, but I say it. Make it a play. Just
like small children, play with it.
Question 6
THE OTHER DAY YOU SAID THAT DARKNESS IS MORE FUNDAMENTAL TO EXISTENCE,
WHILE MOST RELIGIONS HOLD THE CONTRARY VIEW. WILL YOU KINDLY SHED SOME MORE
LIGHT ON THIS QUESTION, PARTICULARLY IN VIEW OF WHAT MODERN SCIENCE HAS TO
SAY ABOUT IT? DOES IT NOT SAY THAT THE LAST DIVISIBLE COMPONENTS OF MATTER
ARE JUST ELECTRIC ENERGY?
Again the same division -- light and darkness. They are two if you look at
them through the mind. They are one if you meditate upon them. Whether you
meditate on light or on darkness, it makes no difference. If you meditate,
the other is dissolved into it. Then light is nothing but less darkness and
darkness is nothing but less light; the difference is of degree. They are
not two things opposed to each other; rather, two degrees of one phenomenon.
And that one phenomenon is neither light nor darkness. That one of which
these two are degrees is neither light nor darkness; or, it is both. You can
enter into it from light, you can enter into it from darkness.
Many religions have used light because it is more comfortable, easier.
Darkness is difficult, more uncomfortable, and if you try to enter through
darkness, you have chosen a more arduous path. That's why many religions
have chosen light. But you can choose either; it depends on you. If you are
adventurous, courageous, choose darkness. If you are afraid, and don't want
to go on an arduous path, choose light. Because both belong to one
phenomenon which appears at one point as light, at another point as
darkness.
For example, this room is filled with light. But it is not filled with the
same light for everyone, or is it? If my eyes are weak then the light is not
as light as it is for you. I see it as a little darker. Imagine if someone
from Mars or from some other planet comes, who has very penetrating eyes.
Then where you see light, he will see much light, more light then you see.
And where you see darkness, he will see light. There are animals and birds
who see in the night where you cannot see. For them it is light, for you it
is darkness.
So what is light? And what is darkness? -- one phenomenon. And how much you
can penetrate into it, and how much it can penetrate into you... it depends
on that penetration whether you call it light or darkness. These polar
opposites just appear to be opposites. They are not, they are relative
degrees of one phenomenon. So scientists say that the last divisible
components of matter are just electric energy. But they don't say they are
light; they say electric energy. Darkness is also electric energy, and light
is also electric energy. Electric energy is not synonymous with light. If
you give it the name electric energy, then light is one expression and
darkness is another.
But there is no need to move into scientific discussion about it. It is
useless. Rather, think about your own mind, what you like. If you feel at
ease with light, enter through light. That is your door. If you feel at ease
with darkness, enter through darkness. And both will lead to the same.
Many methods in these 112 are concerned with light; a few are concerned
with darkness. And Shiva is trying to explain all the methods possible. He
is not talking to particular types; he is talking to all types. But there
are a few persons who will like to enter through darkness. For example, a
feminine mind, more passive, more receptive, will like to enter through
darkness; it will be more acceptable. A male mind will like the light more.
You may not have observed the fact that many poets of the past and the
present, many philosophers, and many others who have a deep insight into the
human mind, have always compared the female with darkness, and the male with
light. Light is aggressive, a male element; darkness is receptive, a female
element. Darkness is like a womb.
So it depends: if you like darkness, good, enter through it. If you like
light, enter through it. Sometimes even the opposite becomes appealing. You
can try that also. There is no danger in trying anything, because every path
leads to the same goal.
But don't go on thinking about what to choose. Don't waste time; rather,
try. Because you can go on thinking forever about what will be suitable,
what to do and what not to do, and why so many religions have insisted on
light, and so few on darkness. Don't get worried about these things; they
don't help. Rather, you think about your own type, about what will be
suitable for you, in what you will feel more comfortable, and then start it.
And then forget all others, because all of these 112 methods are not for
you. Even if you choose one method, for you it is enough. You need not go
through 112 methods; one method will do. So just be receptive and aware so
that you can catch the method that is for you. You need not get worried
about every other method; that is unnecessary. Choose one, play with it, and
if you feel good and something is happening, then move into it and forget
all the other 111. If you feel you have chosen wrongly, then throw it,
choose another, and play with it. If you try this with four or five or six
methods, you will fall upon the right one. But don't be serious -- just
play.
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