THE ENERGY ENHANCEMENT MEDITATION COURSE BY VIDEO
VIGYAN BHAIRAV TANTRA VOL2
Finding the changeless through the changing
VIGYAN BHAIRAV TANTRA VOL2
Finding the changeless through the changin
BE
THE UNSAME SAME TO FRIEND AS TO STRANGER, IN HONOR AND DISHONOR.
HERE IS THE SPHERE OF CHANGE, CHANGE, CHANGE. THROUGH CHANGE CONSUME
CHANGE.
Northrope
says somewhere that the Western mind has been continuously searching for the
theoretical component of existence -- the causal link for how things happen,
what is the cause, how the effect can be controlled, how man can manipulate
nature. And the Eastern mind, says Northrope, has been on a different
adventure. The search has been to find the aesthetic component of reality --
not the theoretical, but the aesthetic.
The Eastern mind has not been much involved with the search to know how to
manipulate nature, but it has been interested in how to be one with nature
-- not in how to conquer it, but in how to be in a deep friendship, a deep
participation with it. The Western mind has been in a conflict, a struggle;
the Eastern mind has been in a mystique, a love relationship. I don't know
whether Northrope will agree with me or not, but my feeling is that science
is a hatred, a relationship of hatred with nature; hence, struggle, fight,
conquering, the language of victory.
Religion is a love relationship; hence, no conflict, no struggle. In
another way, science is a male attitude and religion a female attitude.
Science is aggressive, religion is receptive. The Eastern mind is religious.
Or, if you allow me, I will say that wherever a religious mind is, it is
Eastern. The scientific mind is Western. It makes no difference whether a
man is born in the East or the West. I am using East and West as two
attitudes, two approaches, not as two geographical denominations. You can be
born in the West, but you may not belong there; you may be Eastern through
and through. You may be born in the East, but you may not belong; you may be
scientific, the approach may be mathematical, intellectual.
Tantra is absolutely Eastern. It is a way of participating with reality --
a way how to be one with it, how to dissolve boundaries, how to move in an
undifferentiated realm. Mind differentiates, creates boundaries,
definitions, because mind cannot work without definitions, without
boundaries. The more clear-cut the boundaries, the better the possibility
for the mind to work. So mind cuts, divides, chops everything.
Religion is a dissolving of boundaries in order to move to the
undifferentiated where there is no definition, where there is no limit to
anything, where everything moves into everything else, where everything is
everything else. You cannot cut, you cannot chop existence. The consequences
are bound to be very different in each approach. By the scientific approach,
by dividing, chopping, you can come only to dead particles, atoms, because
life is something which cannot be cut into divisions. And the moment you cut
it, it is no more there. It is as if someone goes to study a symphony by
studying each single note. Each single note is part of the symphony, but it
is not the symphony. The symphony is created by many notes dissolving into
each other. You cannot study a symphony by studying notes.
I cannot study you by studying your parts, You are not just a total of
parts, you are more than that. When you divide and cut and analyze, life
disappears; only dead parts are left. That is why science will never be
capable of knowing what life is, and whatsoever is known through science
will be about death -- matter -- it will never be about life. Science may
become capable of manipulating life, of knowing the parts, the dead parts.
It may be capable of manipulating life, but, still LIFE is not known, not
even touched. Life remains unknowable for science. By the very method of its
technology, its methodology, by the very approach, life cannot be known
through it.
That is why science goes on denying -- denying anything else other than
matter. The very approach debars any contact with that which is life. And
the vice versa happens also: if you move deeply into religion, you will
start denying matter. Shankara says that matter is illusion, it is not
there; it simply appears to be. The whole Eastern approach has been to deny
the world, matter, anything material. Why? Science goes on denying life, the
divine, consciousness. Deeper religious experiences go on denying matter --
all that is material. Why? Because of the very approach. If you look at life
without differentiation, matter disappears. Matter is life divided,
differentiated. Matter means life defined, analyzed into parts.
So, of course, if you look at life undifferentiatedly and become part of
it, in a deep participation, if you become one with existence as two lovers
become one, matter disappears. That is why Shankara says that matter is
illusion. If you participate in existence, it is. But Marx says that
consciousness is just a by-product, it is not substantial; it is just a
function of matter. If you divide life, then consciousness disappears,
becomes illusory. Then only matter is.
What I am intending to say to you is this: Existence is one. If you
approach it through analysis, it appears material, dead. If you approach it
through participation, it appears as life, as divine, as consciousness. If
you approach it through science there is no possibility of any deep bliss
happening to you, because with dead matter bliss is impossible. At the most
it can only be illusory. Only with a deep participation is bliss possible.
Tantra is a love technique. The effort is to make you one with existence.
So you will have to lose many things before you can enter. You will have to
lose your habitual pattern of analyzing things; you will have to lose the
deep-rooted attitude of fighting, of thinking in terms of conquering.
When Hillary reached to the highest peak of the Himalayas, Mount Everest,
all of the Western world reported it as a conquering -- a conquering of
Everest. Only in a Zen monastery in Japan, on a wall newspaper, it was
written, "Everest has been befriended" -- not conquered! This is the
difference -- "Everest has been befriended"; now humanity has become
friendly with it. Everest has allowed Hillary to come to it. It was not a
conquering. The very word `conquer' is vulgar, violent. To think in terms of
conquering shows aggressiveness. Everest has received Hillary, welcomed him,
and now humanity has become friendly; now the chasm is bridged. Now we are
not unacquainted. One of us has been received by Everest. Now Everest has
become part of human consciousness. This is a bridging.
Then the whole thing becomes totally different. It depends on how you look
at it. Remember this before we enter the techniques. Remember this: tantra
is a love effort towards existence. That is why so much of sex has been used
by tantra: because it is a love technique. It is not only love between man
and woman; it is love between you and existence, and for the first time
existence becomes meaningful to you through a woman. If you are a woman,
then existence becomes for the first time meaningful to you through a man.
That is why sex has been so much discussed and used by tantra. Think of
yourself as absolutely asexual -- as if all sex were removed from you the
day you were born. Just think: all sex was completely removed from you the
day you were born. You will be unable to love; you will be unable to feel
any affinity with anyone. It will be difficult to get out of yourself. You
will remain enclosed, you will not be able to approach, to go out to meet
someone. There in existence, you will be a dead thing, closed from
everywhere.
Sex is your effort to reach out. You move from yourself; someone else
becomes the center. You leave your ego behind, you go away from it to meet
someone. If you really want to meet you will have to surrender, and if the
other also wants to meet you he will also have to move out. Look at the
miracle in love -- at what happens. You move to the other and the other
moves to you. He comes into you and you go into him or into her. You have
changed places. Now he becomes your soul and you become her soul or his
soul. This is a participation. Now you are meeting. Now you have become a
circle. This is the first meeting where you are not enclosed in the ego.
This meeting can become just a stepping stone toward a greater meeting with
universe, with existence, with reality.
Tantra is based not on intellect, but on heart. It is not an intellectual
effort, it is a feeling effort. Remember this, because that will help you to
understand the techniques. Now we will enter the techniques.
The first technique:
"BE THE UNSAME SAME TO FRIEND AS TO STRANGER, IN HONOR AND DISHONOR."
"BE THE UNSAME SAME" -- this is the base. What is happening in you? Two
things are happening. Something in you remains continuously the same, it
never changes. You may not have observed it, you may not have encountered it
yet, but if you observe you will come to know that something in you remains
constantly the same. Because of that sameness, you can have an identity.
Because of that sameness, you feel yourself centered; otherwise you will be
a chaos. You say, "My childhood." Now what has remained of it? WHO says, "My
childhood"? Who is this "my, me, I"?
Nothing has remained of your childhood. If your pictures of your childhood
are shown to you for the first time, you will not be able to recognize them.
Everything has changed. Your body is no more the same; not a single cell has
remained the same. Physiologists says that the body is a flux, it is
river-like. Every moment many cells are dying and many new ones are born.
Within seven years your body will have changed completely. So if you are
going to live seventy years, ten times over your body has renewed itself
completely.
Every moment your body is changing, and your mind. You cannot recognize a
photograph of your childhood, and if it were possible to give you a
photograph of your mind, of your childhood mind, it would be impossible to
recognize it. Your mind is even more of a flux than your body. Every moment
everything changes. Even for a single moment nothing remains the same. In
the morning you were different as far as your mind is concerned. In the
evening you are totally a different person.
When someone would come to meet Buddha, before the person would depart,
take leave of him, Buddha would say, "Remember, the man who has come to meet
me is not the man who is going back. You are totally different now. Your
mind has changed." Meeting with a buddha is, of course, bound to change your
mind for better or worse, but you cannot be the same.
You came here with a different mind; you will go with a different mind.
Something has changed. Something new has been added, something has been
deleted. And even if you are not meeting anyone, if you are just remaining
by yourself, then too you cannot remain the same. Every moment the river is
moving.
Heraclitus has said, "You cannot step twice in the same river." The same
can be said about man: you cannot meet the same man again -- impossible! And
because of this fact, and because of our ignorance of it, life becomes a
misery -- because you go on expecting the other to be the same. You marry a
girl and you expect her to be the same. She cannot be! Unmarried, she was
different; married, she is completely different. A lover is something else,
a husband is something totally different. You cannot expect your lover to
meet you through your husband. That is impossible. A lover is a lover; a
husband is a husband. The moment a lover becomes a husband, everything has
changed. But you go on expecting. That creates misery -- unnecessary misery.
If we can recognize this fact that mind goes on moving and changing
continuously, we will escape many, many miseries without any cost. All you
need is simple awareness that mind changes.
Someone loves you and then you go on expecting love. But the next moment he
hates you; then you are disturbed -- not because of his hate, but only
because of your expectation. He has changed. He is alive, so he is bound to
change. But if you can see the reality as it is you will not be disturbed.
The one who was in love a moment before can be in hate a moment later, but
wait! One moment later he will be in love again. So don't be in a hurry,
just be patient. And if the other can also see this changing pattern, then
he will not be fighting for changing patterns. They change; that is natural.
So if you look at your body, it changes. If you try to understand your
mind, it changes. It is never the same. Even for two consecutive moments,
nothing is the same. Your personality goes on like a flux. If this is all
and there is nothing which remains the same continuously, eternally,
timelessly, then who will remember that this was "my childhood"? Childhood
has changed, the body has changed, the mind has changed. Then who remembers?
Then who knows about childhood and about youth and about old age? Who knows?
This knower must remain the same; this witness must remain the same. Only
then can the witness have a perspective. The witness can say, "This was my
childhood, this was my young age, this was my old age. This moment I was in
love, and this moment the love changed into hatred." This witnessing
consciousness, this knower, is always the same.
So you have two realms or two dimensions existing together in you. You are
both -- the changing which is always changing and the non-changing which is
always remaining non-changing. If you become aware of these two realms, then
this technique will be helpful: "BE THE UNSAME SAME." Remember this: "BE THE
UNSAME SAME." You are bound to be "unsame" on the periphery, but at the
center remain the same.
Remember that which is the same. Just remembering will be enough; you need
not do anything else. It is non-changing. You cannot change it, but you can
forget it. You can be so engrossed, obsessed with the changing world around
you -- with your body, with your mind -- that you may completely forget the
center. The center is so much clouded by the changing flux -- and, of
course, there are problems: that which is constantly the same is difficult
to remember because change creates problems.
For example, if a constant noise goes on around you, you will not be aware
of it. If a clock on the wall goes on, tick-tock, tick-tock the whole day,
you are never aware of it. But if suddenly it stops, you will immediately
become aware. If something is constantly the same, there is no need to take
any notice. When something changes, the mind has to take notice. It creates
a gap, and the pattern vibrates. You were hearing it continuously, so there
was no need to hear it. It was there, it became part of the background. But
if now suddenly the clock stops, you will become aware. Your consciousness
will suddenly come to the gap.
It is just as if one of your teeth falls out; then your tongue goes
continuously to the place. When the tooth was there the tongue never tried
to touch it. Now the tooth is not there -- just a gap is there -- then the
whole day, howsoever you try, you cannot help it: the tongue goes to the
gap. Why? Because something is missing and the background has changed.
Something new has entered.
Whenever something new enters, you become conscious -- for many reasons. It
is a safety measure. It is needed for your life -- to survive. When
something changes you have to become aware. It may be dangerous. You have to
take notice, and you have to adjust again to the new situation that has come
into being. But if everything is as it was, there is no need. You need not
be aware. And this same element in you, what Hindus have called ATMAN, the
soul, has been there always from the very beginning, if there was any
beginning. And it is going to the very end, if there is going to be any end.
It has been eternally the same, so how can you be aware of it?
Because it is so permanently the same, eternally the same, you are missing
it. You take notice of the body, you take notice of the mind because they
are changing. And because you take notice of them, you start thinking that
you are them. You know only them; you become identified.
The whole spiritual effort is to find the same amidst the unsame -- to find
the eternal in the changing, to find that which is always the same. That is
your center, and if you can remember that center, only then will this
technique be easy -- or if you can do this technique, remembering will
become easy. From both the ends you can travel.
Try this technique. The technique is to "BE THE UNSAME SAME TO FRIEND AS TO
STRANGER." To the friend and to the enemy, or to the stranger, be the "unsame
same." What does it mean? It seems contradictory. In a way you will have to
change, because if your friend comes to meet you, you will have to meet him
differently, and if a stranger comes you will have to meet him differently.
How can you meet a stranger as if you know him already? You cannot. The
difference will be there, but still, deep down remain the same. The attitude
must remain the same, but the behavior will be "unsame." You cannot meet an
unknown person as if you know him already. How can you? You can pretend at
the most, but pretensions will not do. The difference will be there.
There is no need to pretend with a friend that he is a friend. With a
stranger, even if you try to act as if he is a friend, it will be pretension
-- something new. You cannot be the same; unsameness will be necessary. As
far as behavior is concerned you will be different, but as far as your
consciousness is concerned you can be the same. You can look at the friend
as at the stranger.
It is difficult. You may have heard, "Look at the stranger as if he is a
friend," but that is not possible if what I am saying is not possible. First
look at your friend as the stranger; only then you can look at the stranger
as at the friend. They are correlated.
Have you ever looked at your friends as if they are strangers? If you have
not, then you have not looked at all. Look at your wife: do you really know
her? You may have lived with her for twenty years or even more, and the more
you live with her, the more is the possibility that you will go on
forgetting that she is a stranger -- and she remains a stranger. Howsoever
you love her, it will not make any difference.
ENERGY ENHANCEMENT
THE CORE ENERGY TECHNIQUES !!
ENERGY
ENHANCEMENT, !!! ULTIMATE !!!!!! ANCIENT !!! !!! EFFECTIVE !!!!!
SUCCESSFUL !!!
1. Get into Intense alignment with Your Own Kundalini Energy and Immediate
Access to the Meditative State.
2. Remove your Energy Blockages with The Circulation of the Energies, the
Kundalini Kriyas, Ancient Taoist Energy Circulations which have worked
effectively for 5000 years to help all towards ENLIGHTENMENT.
3. The Grounding of all your Negative Energies through Alchemical VITRIOL -
Become Incredibly POSITIVE and ENERGETIC!!
4. Alignment with Your Higher Self - INCREASE YOUR IQ, INCREASE YOUR LUCK,
ACCESS YOUR HIGHEST ENERGIES!! ACHIEVE WHAT YOU WERE PUT ON THIS PLANET TO DO.
5. Learn how to USE and Increase the LOVE of Your Heart Center to ZAP YOUR
NEGATIVE EMOTIONS AND DEVELOP PSYCHIC POWERS TO HEAL YOURSELF AND OTHERS.
6. Overcome ENERGY VAMPIRES - MASTER ENERGY PROTECTION AND MAINTAIN YOUR HIGH
ENERGIES!!
7. EXPERIENCE INCREDIBLE RELATIONSHIPS WITH ENERGY ENHANCEMENT - THE CORE ENERGY
TECHNIQUES
8. ENERGY ENHANCEMENT Techniques are the source of all Successful spiritual
training courses over the last 5000 years. Become a Jedi Master, a Gandalf, a
Transmitter of the FORCE a Bringer of the Light!!
GET MORE ENERGY!!!
ENERGY ENHANCEMENT -
!!! ULTIMATE !!!
!!! ANCIENT !!!
!!! EFFECTIVE !!!
!!! SUCCESSFUL !!!
Goto and SIGNUP NOW!!
https://www.energyenhancement.org/HomeStudyMeditationCourse.htm
CLICK BELOW TO GO TO
Take your time, this site has much new wonderful information. |
Really, if you love her more, the more strange she will look -- because the
more you love, the deeper you penetrate and the more you know how river-like
she is, moving, changing, alive, every moment different. If you don't look
deeply, if you just stick to the level that she is your wife, that this is
her name or that, then you have chosen a particular fragment, and you go on
thinking of that particular fragment as your wife. And whenever she has to
change, she has to hide her changes. She may not be in a loving mood, but
she has to pretend because you expect love from your wife.
Then everything becomes false. She is not allowed to change; she is not
allowed to be herself. Then something is being forced. Then the whole
relationship goes dead. The more you love, the more you will feel the
changing pattern. Then each moment you are a stranger. You cannot predict;
you cannot say how your husband is going to behave tomorrow morning. You can
predict only if you have a dead husband: then you can predict. Predictions
are possible only about things, never about persons. If some person is
predictable, know well he is dead; he has died. His living is just false, so
you can predict. Nothing is predictable about persons because of the change.
Look at your friend as at a stranger; he is one! Don't be afraid. We are
afraid of strangers, so we go on forgetting that even a friend is a
stranger. If you can look at the stranger in your friend also, you will
never get frustrated because you cannot expect anything from a stranger. You
take your friends for granted; hence, expectations and then frustrations --
because no one can fulfill your expectations, no one is here to fulfill your
expectations. Everyone is here to fulfill his own expectations; no one is
here to fulfill you. Everyone is here to fulfill himself or herself, but you
expect others to fulfill you and others expect you to fulfill them. Then
there is conflict, violence, struggle and misery.
Go on always remembering the stranger. Don't forget, even your closest
friend is a stranger -- as far removed from you as possible. If this feeling
happens to you, this knowing, then you can look at the stranger and you can
find a friend there also. If a friend can be a stranger, then a stranger can
be a friend. Look at a stranger: he doesn't know your language, he doesn't
belong to your country, he doesn't belong to your religion, he doesn't
belong to your color. You are white and he is black or you are black and he
is white. You cannot communicate through language; you don't belong to the
same church. So there is no common ground in nation, religion, race or color
-- no common ground! He is totally a stranger. But look into his eyes, and
the same humanity is there, that is the common ground; and the same life,
that is the common ground; and the same existence, that is the root of your
being friends.
You may not understand his language, but you can understand him. Even
silence can be communicative. Just by your looking deep down into his eyes,
the friend will be revealed. And if you know how to look, then even an enemy
cannot deceive you. You can look at the friend in him. He cannot prove that
he is not your friend. Howsoever far removed, he is near you because you
belong to the same existential current, to the same river to which he
belongs. You belong to the same earth of being.
If this happens, then even a tree is not far away from you, then even a
stone is not far away from you. A stone is very strange. There is no meeting
ground, no possibility of any communication -- but the same existence is
there. The stone also exists, the stone also participates in being. He is
there -- I call it "he" -- he also takes up space, he also exists in time.
The sun also rises for him -- as it rises for you. One day he was not, as
you were not, and one day you will die and he will also die. The stone will
disappear. In existence we meet. The meeting is the friendship. In
personality we differ, in manifestation we differ; in essence we are one.
In manifestations we are strangers, so howsoever close we come we remain
far away. You can sit close, you can embrace each other, but there is no
possibility to come more close. As far as your changing personality is
concerned, you are never the same. You are never similar; you are always
strangers. You cannot meet there because before you can meet you have
changed. There is no possibility of meeting. As far as bodies are concerned
and minds are concerned there can be no meeting, because before you can meet
you are no more the same.
Have you ever observed? You feel love for someone -- a very deep upsurge.
You are filled with it, and the moment you go and say, "I love you," it has
disappeared. Have you observed? It may not be there now, it may be just a
memory. It was there, but it is not there now. The very fact that you
asserted it, made it manifest, has made it enter into the realm of change.
When you felt it, it may have been deep in the essence, but when you bring
it out you are bringing it into the pattern of time and change, it is
entering into the river. When you say, "I love you," by then it may have
disappeared completely. It is so difficult, but if you observe, it will
become a fact. Then you can look. In the friend there is the stranger and in
the stranger the friend. Then you can remain "THE UNSAME SAME." You change
peripherally; you remain the same in the essence, in the center.
"IN HONOR AND DISHONOR..." Who is honored and who is dishonored? You?
Never! Only that which is changing, and that you are not. Someone honors
you; if you take it that he is honoring YOU, you will be in difficulty. He
honors a particular manifestation in you, not you. How can he know you? You
don't even know yourself. He honors a particular manifestation; he honors
something which has come into your changing personality. You are kind,
loving; he honors it. But this kindness and this love are just on the
periphery. The next moment you will not be loving, you may be filled with
hate. There may be no flowers -- only thorns. You may not be so happy. You
may be just sad, depressed. You may be cruel, angry. Then he will dishonor
you. Then again the loving manifestation. Others come in contact not with
you, but with your manifestations.
Remember this, they are not honoring and dishonoring YOU. They cannot do
either because they don't know you; they cannot know you. If even you are
not aware of yourself, how can they be? They have their own formulas, they
have their theories, they have their measurements and criteria. They have
their touchstones and they say, "If a man is such and such we will honor
him, and if a man is such and such we will dishonor him." So they act
according to their criteria, and you are never near their touchstones --
only your manifestations.
They can call you a sinner one day and a saint another. They can call you a
saint today, and the next day they may go against you, stone you to death.
What is happening? They come in contact with your periphery, they never come
in contact with you. Remember this, that whatsoever they are saying, it is
not about you. You remain beyond; you remain outside. Their condemnations,
their appreciations, whatsoever they do is not really concerned with you,
just with your manifestations in time.
I will tell you one Zen anecdote. One young monk lived near Kyoto. He was
beautiful, young, and the whole town was pleased. They honored him. They
believed him to be a great saint. Then one day everything turned upside
down. One girl became pregnant, and she told her parents that this monk was
responsible. So the whole town turned against him. They came, and they
burned his cottage. It was morning, and a very cold morning, a winter
morning, and they threw the child onto the monk.
The father of the girl told him, "This is your child, so take the
responsibility."
The monk simply said, "Is it so?" And then the child started weeping, so he
forgot about the crowd and began caring for the child.
The crowd went and destroyed the whole cottage, burned it down. Then the
child was hungry and the monk was without any money, so he had to go to beg
in the city for the child. Who will give him anything now? Just a few
moments before he was a great saint, and now he is a great sinner. Who will
give him anything now? Wherever he tried, they closed their doors in his
face. They condemned him completely.
Then he reached to the same house -- to the house of the girl. The girl was
very much distressed, and then she heard the child weeping and screaming,
and the monk standing there just saying, "Don't give anything to me, I am a
sinner. But the child is not a sinner; you can give milk to this child."
Then the girl confessed that just to hide the real father of the child, she
had taken the name of the monk. He was absolutely innocent.
So the whole town turned around again. They fell at his feet, started
asking his forgiveness. And the father of the girl came, took the child back
with weeping eyes, tears rolling down, and he said, "But why did you not say
so before? Why did you not refuse in the morning? The child does not belong
to you."
The monk is reported to have said again, "Is it so?" In the morning he had
said, "Is it so? This child belongs to me?" And in the afternoon he said,
"Is it so? This child doesn't belong to me?"
This is how this sutra has to be applied in life. In honor and dishonor,
you must remain "THE UNSAME SAME." The innermost center must remain the
same, whatsoever happens to the periphery. The periphery is bound to change,
but you must not change. And because you are two, the periphery and the
center, that is why opposite, contradictory terms have been used: "BE THE
UNSAME SAME..." And you can apply this technique to all opposites: in love
and hate, poverty and richness, comfort and uncomfort, or in anything,
remain "THE UNSAME SAME."
Just know that the change is happening only to your periphery; it cannot
happen to you, it is impossible. So you can remain detached, and this
detachment is not forced. You simply know it is so. This is not a forced
detachment; this is not any effort on your part to remain detached. If you
TRY to remain detached, you are still on the periphery; you have not known
the center. The center is detached; it has always been so. It is
transcendental. It is always the beyond. Whatsoever happens below never
happens to it.
Try this in polar situations. Go on feeling something in you which is the
same. When someone is insulting you, focus yourself to the point where you
are just listening to him -- not doing anything, not reacting -- just
listening. He is insulting you, and then someone is praising you. Just
listen. Insult-praise, honor-dishonor: just listen. Your periphery will get
disturbed. Look at it also; don't change it. Look at it; remain deep in your
center, looking from there. You will have a detachment which is not forced,
which is spontaneous, which is natural.
And once you have the feeling of the natural detachment, nothing can
disturb you. You will remain silent. Whatsoever happens in the world, you
will remain unmoved. Even if someone is killing you, only the body will be
touched -- not you. You will remain beyond. This "beyondness" leads you into
existence, into that which is bliss, eternal, into that which is true, which
is always, into that which is deathless, into life itself. You may call it
God or you can choose your term. You can call it NIRVANA, whatsoever you
like, but unless you move from the periphery to the center and unless you
become aware of the eternal in you, religion has not happened to you,
neither has life happened to you. You are missing, simply missing all. That
is possible -- to miss the ecstasy of living.
Shankara says that "I call the man a SANNYASIN who knows what is changing
and what is non- changing, who knows what is moving and what is non-moving."
This, in Indian philosophy, is known as discrimination -- VIVEK. To
discriminate between these two, the realm of the change and the realm of the
unchanging -- this is called VIVEK, discrimination, awareness.
This sutra can be used very, very deeply and very easily with whatsoever
you are doing. You feel hunger? Remember the two realms. Hunger can only be
felt by the periphery because the periphery needs food, needs fuel. You
don't need food, you don't need any fuel, but the body needs them. Remember,
when hunger happens it is happening to the periphery; you are just the
knower of it. If you were not there, it would not be known. If the body were
not there, it would not happen. By your absence only knowledge will not be
there because the body cannot know. The body can have it, but it cannot know
it. You know it; you cannot have it.
So never say that "I am hungry." Always say within, "I know that my body is
hungry." Give emphasis to your knowing. Then the discrimination is there.
You are becoming old: never say, "I am becoming old." Just say, "My body is
becoming old." Then in the moment of death also you will know, "I am not
dying; my body is dying. I am changing bodies, just changing the house." If
this discrimination deepens, one day, suddenly, there will be enlightenment.
The second sutra:
"HERE IS THE SPHERE OF CHANGE, CHANGE, CHANGE. THROUGH CHANGE CONSUME
CHANGE."
The first thing to understand is that everything you know about is change;
except for you, the knower, everything is change. Have you seen anything
which is not change? This whole world is a phenomenon of change. Even the
Himalayas are changing. They say -- the scientists who work on it -- that
they are growing; these Himalayas are the youngest mountains in the world,
still a child, really, still growing. They have not yet become mature; they
have not reached to the point from where something begins to decline. They
are still rising.
If you compare them with Vindhyachal, another mountain, they are just
children. Vindhyachal is one of the oldest -- and some say the oldest
mountain in the world. It is so old, it is decreasing -- coming down. For
centuries, it is coming down -- just dying, in its old age. So even a
Himalaya which looks so stable, unchanging, unmoving, is changing. It is
just a river of stones. Stones make no difference; they are also river-like,
floating. Comparatively everything is changing. Something looks more
changing, something looks less changing, but that is only relative.
Nothing is unchanging that you can know. Remember my point: nothing that
you can know is unchanging. Nothing is unchanging except the knower. But
that is always behind. It always "knows"; it is really never known. It can
never become the object; it is always the subject. Whatsoever you do or
know, it is always behind. You cannot know it. When I say this, don't get
disturbed. When I say that you cannot know it, I mean you cannot know it as
an object. I can look at you, but how can I look at myself in the same way?
It is impossible because to be in a relationship of knowledge two things are
needed -- the knower and the known.
So when I look at you, you are the known and I am the knower, and the
knowledge can exist as a bridge. But where to make the bridge when I look at
myself, when I am trying to know myself? There only I am, alone -- totally
alone. The other bank is missing, so where to create the bridge? How to know
myself?
So self-knowledge is a negative process. You cannot know yourself directly;
you can simply go on eliminating objects of knowledge. Go on eliminating the
objects of knowledge. When there is no object of knowledge, when you cannot
know anything, when there is nothing but the vacuum, the emptiness -- and
this is what meditation is: just eliminating all objects of knowledge --
then a moment comes when consciousness is, but there is nothing to be
conscious of; knowing is, but there is nothing to know. The simple, pure
energy of knowing remains and nothing is left to be known. There is no
object.
In that state when there is nothing to be known, it is said that you know
yourself in a certain sense. But that KNOWLEDGE is totally different from
all other knowledge. It is misleading to use the same word for both. There
have been mystics who have said that self-knowledge is contradictory, the
very term is contradictory. Knowledge is always of the other; self-knowledge
is not possible. But when the other is not, something happens. You may call
it "self-knowledge," but the word is misleading.
So whatsoever you know is change. Everywhere, even these walls, are
constantly changing. Now physics supports this. Even the wall which looks so
stationary, non-changing, is changing every moment. A great flux is on.
Every atom is moving, every electron is moving. Everything is moving fast,
and the movement is so fast that you cannot detect it. That is why the wall
looks so permanent. In the morning it was like this, in the afternoon it was
like that, in the evening it was like this, yesterday it was like this and
tomorrow it will be like this. You look at it as if it is the same, but it
is not. Your eyes are not capable of detecting such great movement.
The fan is there. If the fan is moving very fast, you will not be able to
see the space, it will look like just one circle. Space cannot be seen
because the movement is fast, and if the movement is so fast -- just as fast
as electrons are moving -- you will not see that the fan is moving at all.
You will not be able to detect the movement. The fan will look stationary;
you will even be able to touch it. It will be stationary, and your hand will
not even be able to enter into the gaps, because your hand cannot move so
fast as to go into the gaps. Before you move, another blade will have come.
Before you move, still another blade will have come. You will always touch
the blade, and the movement will be so fast that the fan will look like it
is non-moving. So things that are non-moving are very fast moving: that is
why there is the appearance that they are stationary.
This sutra says that everything is change: "HERE IS THE SPHERE OF
CHANGE..." On this sutra Buddha's whole philosophy stands. Buddha says that
everything is a flux, changing, non-permanent, and that one should know
this. Buddha's emphasis is so much on this point. His whole standpoint is
based on it. He says, "change, change, change: remember this continuously."
Why? If you can remember change, detachment will happen. How can you be
attached when everything is changing?
You look at a face; it is very beautiful. When you look at a face that is
very beautiful, there is a feeling that this is going to remain. Understand
it deeply. Never expect that this is going to remain. But if you know that
this is changing fast, that this is beautiful this moment and it may be ugly
the next, how can you feel any attachment? It is impossible. Look at a body:
it is alive; the next moment it will be dead. All is futile, if you feel the
change.
Buddha left his palace, his family -- his beautiful wife, his child -- and
when someone asked him, "Why?" he said, "Where there is nothing permanent,
what is the use? The child will die." And the night Buddha left, the child
was born. He was just a few hours old. Buddha went into his wife's room to
have a last look. The wife's back was towards the door. She was holding the
child in her arms in sleep. Buddha wanted to say goodbye, but then he
resisted. He said, "What is the use?"
A moment came in his mind when a thought flashed that "The child is just
one day old, a few hours old, and I must have a look." But then he said,
"What is the use? Everything is changing. This day the child is born, and
the next day the child will die. And one day before he was not here. Now he
is here, and one day again he will not be here. So what is the use?
Everything is changing." He left -- turned back and left.
When someone asked, "Why have you left all that?" he said, "I am in search
of that which never changes, because if I stick to that which changes there
is going to be frustration. If I cling to that which is changing, I am
stupid, because it will change, it will not remain the same. Then I will be
frustrated. So I am in search of that which never changes. If there is
anything which never changes, only then does life have any worth and
meaning. Otherwise everything is futile." He based his whole teaching on
change.
This sutra is beautiful. This sutra says, "THROUGH CHANGE CONSUME CHANGE."
Buddha would never say the second part. The second part is basically
tantric. Buddha will say that everything is change; feel it, and then you
will not cling to it. And when you don't cling to it, by and by, by leaving
everything that changes, you will fall into yourself to the center where
there is no change. Just go on eliminating change, and you will come to the
unmoving, to the center -- the center of the wheel. That is why Buddha has
chosen the wheel as the symbol of his religion: because the wheel moves, but
the center on which it moves remains unmoving. So the SANSARA -- the world
-- moves like a wheel. Your personality moves like a wheel, and your
innermost essence remains the center on which the wheel moves. It remains
unmoving.
Buddha will say life is change. He will agree with the first part. The next
-- the second part -- is typically tantric: "THROUGH CHANGE CONSUME CHANGE."
Tantra says don't leave that which is changing; move into it. Don't cling,
but move. Why be afraid? Move into it, live it out. Allow it to happen, and
you move into it. Consume it through itself. Don't be afraid, don't escape.
Where will you escape? How can you escape? Everywhere there is change.
Tantra says everywhere is change. Where will you escape? Where can you go?
Wherever you go the change will be there. All escape is futile, so don't
try to escape. Then what to do? Don't cling. Live the change, be the change.
Don't create any struggle with it. Move with it. The river is flowing; you
flow with it. Don't even swim; allow the river to take you. Don't fight with
it, don't waste your energy by fighting with it; just relax. Be in a let-go
and move with the river.
What will happen? If you can move with a river without any conflict,
without any direction of your own, if the river's direction is your
direction, suddenly you will become aware that you are not the river. You
will become aware that you are not the river! Feel it. Some day try it in a
river. Go there, relax, and allow the river to take you. Don't fight; become
the river. Suddenly you will feel that the river is all around, but you are
not the river.
In fighting you may forget this. That is why tantra says, "THROUGH CHANGE
CONSUME CHANGE." Don't fight. There is no need because in you the change
cannot enter. So don't be afraid. Live in the world. Don't be afraid because
in you the world cannot enter. Live it. Don't choose this way or that.
There are two types of people: one that will cling to the world of change
and one that will escape. But tantra says it is change, so to cling is
futile and to escape also. What is the use? Buddha says, "What is the use of
remaining in the world of change?" Tantra says, "What is the use of escaping
from it?"
Both are futile. Rather, allow it to happen. You are not concerned with it;
it is happening, you are not even needed for it. You were not and the world
was changing, and you will not be and the world will go on changing -- so
why create any fuss about it?
ENERGY ENHANCEMENT
THE CORE ENERGY TECHNIQUES !!
CLICK BELOW TO GO TO
Take your time, this site has much new wonderful information. |
ENERGY ENHANCEMENT OSHO MEDITATION ARTICLES INTRODUCTION TESTIMONIALS EE DIRECTORS EE FAQS EE LEVEL1 EE LEVEL2 EE LEVEL3 EE LEVEL4 EE DVD VIDEO COURSE EE ONLINE COURSE COURSE IN ARGENTINA COURSE IN SPAIN COURSE IN PERU + IGUAZU EE COURSES INDIA TOUR EE COURSES TAJ MAHAL EE YOGA TEACHER TRAINING TALKS BY SATCHIDANAND EE E BOOK EE REIKI EE TEACHER TRAINING |