Osho –
Dhammapada: The Way of The Buddha (Volume 8)
Chapter 8. Out
of chaos stars are born
Question 1:
Beloved Master,
Whenever one comes to the absurd, something
inside simply explodes and the whole world looks anew. Is it when the absurd
becomes overwhelming that one gets an insight into the gestalt of everything?
Prem Prabhati, the absurd is
nothing but
another name of God - and a far more
beautiful name than God itself. For centuries the theologians, the philosophers
have destroyed the beauty of the word 'God'. They have painted it, polished it,
with such rational garbage that it has no more any life left in it. The god of
the philosophers is not the true God because it is nothing but a rational
concept.
The God of the lovers is a
totally different phenomenon; it has nothing to do with reason, with mind. It
is the heart pulsating in tune with the whole. It is a song, a symphony. It is
a dance, a celebration. It is more poetry than prose. It is more intuitive than
intellectual. It is something felt not thought.
Hence I say 'the absurd' is a
far better name for God.
The mind has created a subtle
structure around itself of rationality to protect the ego, to protect the
separation from existence. All rationality is man-made - and God is not
man-made. All rationality is just a projection of our own ideas on the screen
of existence. And God is not a projection; it is a discovery.
To see God one needs eyes
absolutely without any idea. The idea is the greatest cloud.
One of the greatest mystics of
the West - whose name is not known because he has not signed his book - has
written one of the most important mystic treatises ever: the cloud of unknowing. He says
that it is not through knowledge that you come to know; on the contrary, you
come to know by unknowing. This is pure absurdity! It is talking in paradoxes:
knowing through unknowing.
What does he mean? He means
that when all knowledge has been dropped, when all experience has been put
aside, when mind as such is no more functioning, then you relate with existence
in a totally new way. Each fiber of your being pulsates with the whole; it is a
rhythmic dance. It IS absurd - you cannot make a theory out of it.
God is not a hypothesis. If God
is a hypothesis, then that hypothesis is no more needed.
Far better hypotheses have been
proposed by science. But God has never been a hypothesis. It is a passionate
love affair with existence. It is feeling the existence. It is being in a
heart-to-heart contact with existence.
Tertullian is always worth
remembering - a great Christian mystic. He says: I believe in God because God
is absurd - credo qua absurdum est.
The reason that he gives for his belief is that there is no reason to believe.
Unless you have something in
your life which cannot be supported by reason at all, your life will not have
any significance. Unless you have something for which you can live and for
which you can die without any rational grounds, you will go on missing the very
meaning of life and existence. You will remain superficial.
Hence the absurd can release
something tremendous in you; it can become an explosion. It can make you see
the whole world anew, because it is a rebirth. You slip out of the mind. You
are no longer covered by the dust of the mind. Everything is fresh and new
then. It is mind which makes things old. Because of memory, past, the mind goes
on interpreting everything new in terms of the old. Mind cannot do otherwise.
Mind means memory - memory and
nothing else. It is your accumulated past experience, and you go on
interpreting the new according to the past. Naturally, the past gives its color
to the new, it gives its meaning to the new - and the new is missed.
That's why the whole world
looks so bored, utterly bored. Existentialists have brought out this situation
of boredom as one of the most significant points to be pondered over.
They say that man is utterly
bored, and they are right. Only stupid people are not bored, or buddhas are not
bored. Stupid people are not bored because they don't have that much sensibility,
that much sensitiveness to feel boredom. And buddhas are not bored because they
don't carry the past. Everything is so fresh, so new; everything is such a
surprise. Every moment you are in for a surprise.
For a buddha, life is a
continuous revelation, unending revelation. There is no beginning to it and no
end to it. It is a mystery; unfathomable, immeasurable, unknown and not only
unknown but unknowable too. You can only taste it, feel it, see it, touch it,
but you cannot KNOW it. You cannot reduce it to a theorem, to a hypothesis;
that is not possible.
Prabhati, you are right: if you
can have a contact with the absurdity of it all, with the irrationality of
existence, you are moving into a totally different dimension - moving from mind
to no-mind, moving from mind to meditation. That's what meditation is all
about: taking you out of the prison of the mind, the prison of the past. And
there is no other prison; that past is the only prison.
The man of awareness - the
meditator - goes on dying every moment to the past so that he remains new,
fresh, childlike. Yes, if the absurd becomes overwhelming, you will have your
first insight into the gestalt of everything. But remember again, the insight
will not be rational. You will not be able to explain it away. You will not be
able to say anything about it. You will be able to see, but suddenly you will
become dumb.
Suddenly you will find language
absolutely inadequate, words impotent; communication is not possible. Then only
communion remains.
When you know without knowledge, the only way to
convey the message is through silence, through love, through compassion,
through being. You can hold the hand of your friend and something may
transpire. You can embrace your friend and something may transpire. You can
just look into the eyes of your friend and something may transpire. The absurd
can only be expressed through absurd ways. You can dance or you can sing.
There is a beautiful story of a
Baul mystic:
A very rich man, a goldsmith,
came to see the mystic and he asked about God: "Do you believe in God? Is
there really a God? Does God exist?"
The Baul mystic listened to all
his queries smiling, and then he started dancing, playing on his ektara - a one-stringed instrument - he
started dancing.
The goldsmith said, "Are
you mad or something? I am asking great metaphysical questions! Rather than
answering me, you start dancing! Are you drunk?"
And the mystic said,
"That's true, I am drunk - drunk with the divine! But please don't
misunderstand me, don't feel offended. This is the only way I can answer your
questions."
And he sang a song - a song of
tremendous beauty and meaning and insight. He said, "I know that you are a
goldsmith. I know that you can judge whether something is made of real gold or
not. You have a touchstone on which it can be judged. But it will be absolutely
useless if you come into the garden and start judging roses on your touchstone.
For the gold it is okay, but for the roses it is not at all relevant. Roses
cannot be judged on the touchstone on which gold can be judged. You can't know
through the touchstone whether the roses are true or not true. For that you
will need a totally different kind of approach.
"I know that you have
studied much; you are very much interested in philosophical reasoning,
argumentation. I have heard about you. But all that reasoning is as absurd here
as the touchstone of the goldsmith will be in the garden. I am singing, I am
dancing, I am playing music. Feel it! If you can dance with me, come on, dance
with me!
That may give you some insight
into the world where I live. That may give you a touch of the unknown. There is
no other way. I cannot logically answer your questions, hence my illogical
act."
When Bodhidharma, the great
mystic, reached China, the emperor of China had come to welcome him on the
border; with thousands of people he had come to receive the great mystic. But
he felt very embarrassed seeing Bodhidharma. He had never thought, he could
have never imagined, that Bodhidharma would enter China in such an insane way.
Bodhidharma was carrying one of his shoes on his head. One shoe was on one
foot; the other foot was bare - and the other shoe was on his head!
The king asked, "I don't
understand. Why are you carrying one shoe on your head?
Shoes are not meant to be
carried on the head!"
Bodhidharma said, "This is
the beginning. If you cannot understand this, then it is better I should go
back. You have to understand one thing absolutely: that my approach is absurd.
This is just to give an indication of my approach - that I am not a
philosopher.
You can call me a madman, but I
am not a philosopher - and I am going to put things upside down! All that you
have thought up to now, I am going to disturb it. I will bring a chaos into
your being, because only out of chaos stars are born."
It is very difficult to drop reason,
because one feels frightened. Reason gives you a sense of order. Reason gone,
there is only chaos. But remember, reason is barren; chaos is a womb. Out of
that chaos something of tremendous importance is born: you are reborn.
Yes, if the absurd can
overwhelm you, you will have an insight into the gestalt of everything; an
insight which is untransferable, an insight which is inexpressible. But there
are ways beyond words through which it can be communicated.
That's the whole secret of the
relationship of a master to a disciple. It is an absurd phenomenon. That's why
the West has not known it yet. The West knows the relationship between a
teacher and a student; it knows nothing of the relationship between a master
and a disciple. The West is absolutely unaware of that dimension.
That's why Jesus could not be
understood, Socrates could not be understood.
In the East, crucifying a
Buddha has not been our practice; giving poison to Lao Tzu has not been our
way. Why were Jesus, Socrates and Mansoor killed? For the simple reason that
they were trying to bring something absolutely Eastern to the West. They were
trying to bring a new insight into God, and the time was not ripe. Maybe now
the time is ripe. Jesus came a little early.
Now the time is ripe. Now the
West has the possibility to open up a new door - the absurd - and enter through
that door. That is the only door to the temple of God.
Question 2:
Beloved Master,
Old habits die hard!
Prem Harideva, it is true...
but why? Why do old habits die hard? - because you are nothing but your old
habits. If they die, you will die. You don't have anything more, you don't have
anything plus. You are just your old habits, old patterns. You are a mechanism,
not yet a man; that's why old habits die hard. It is very rare that a man
exists, very few and far between.
A Buddha is a real man,
authentic. A Zarathustra is a real man - a man worth calling a man. The
ordinary humanity is just robotlike: it lives unconsciously, it lives
mechanically. And habits are all that you have. If you drop all your habits you
will simply start evaporating; you will not find yourself at all. What are you?
Just watch, and you will find a bundle of old habits. You don't yet have
anything more.
That's the whole effort of
meditation: to bring something more to your life which is not a habit,
something which is spontaneous, something which is nonmechanical, something
which transforms you from a robot into a conscious being.
George Gurdjieff used to say
that every man is not born with a soul. On the surface it appears not
believable because for centuries you have been told by the priests that
everybody is born with a soul and you believe in it. It is comfortable to
believe that you have a soul. It feels very good, cozy, warm, that deep inside
you, you have a soul, eternal, immortal. And Gurdjieff says you don't have a
soul at all! You are jut hollow within; there is nothing inside you - just
habits and habits, a cluster of habits and at the very center there is nobody. The
house is empty. The master has not yet come or is fast asleep.
Gurdjieff is right: you are
only potentially a human being. A possibility is there, but the possibility can
be easily missed. And millions of people miss it because to become conscious,
to become a soul, arduous effort is needed. It is an uphill task. To remain in
your habits is cheap, easy, downhill. Gravitation is enough; it goes on pulling
you.
It is like when you are coming
downhill in a car, you put the engine off. You don't need any gas for coming
downhill; the pull of gravitation is enough. But that cannot be done when you
are moving uphill; then gas will be needed. You will need some integrity, some
power. And only consciousness releases power.
Consciousness is the key, the
ignition key, that releases power in you, and you become capable of soaring
high.
Otherwise, Harideva, this old
saying is right: Old habits die hard... because there is nobody who can kill
those old habits.
At breakfast, Feinberg's wife
said to him, "We are having Sonia's boyfriend to dinner for the first
time. We are gonna have a big meal with our best dishes. So please behave.
Don't eat with your knife, or
you will kill her chance of marriage."
That night at supper all went
well. Feinberg hardly touched a thing for fear of using the wrong tool. Then
coffee arrived. Feinberg took the cup and started to pour his java into the
saucer. The family was looking daggers at him. Feinberg kept right on pouring.
Finally the saucer was full.
Feinberg raised it to his
mouth, looked around the table, and said, "One word out of any of you and
I will make bubbles!"
It is difficult, it is very
hard. You have to be conscious, alert, on guard. You have to go on remembering.
And remembrance is the most difficult thing in existence.
Habits can be dropped not by
fighting against them. That's what people ordinarily do.
If they want to change a habit
they create another habit against it to fight with it. They move from one habit
into another habit. If you want to drop smoking you start chewing gum; now it
is as foolish as the other. You change one habit for another, but you remain
the same unconscious person.
To drop the habit and not to
compensate for it and to remain utterly aware and alert so that you don't start
moving into another substitute is one of the hardest things in life.
But it is not impossible;
otherwise there will be no possibility of a Buddha, of a Christ, of a Krishna.
Because buddhas happen, it is possible - although difficult, very difficult; a
great challenge has to be accepted. And all those who have any respect for
themselves always accept the challenge of the greatest, the hardest thing.
To reach to the moon is not so
hard, it is not so difficult. To go to Everest is child's play compared with
remembering constantly what you are doing, being aware. But the day awareness
starts happening, you know the ecstasy of being, the bliss of being. You know
something which cannot be imagined. It is so vast, it is so inexhaustible!
Aes Dhammo Sanantano. Buddha
says: It is the ultimate law of bliss, of joy, of ecstasy. And it is
inexhaustible; once you enter into it, it is forever yours. Jesus calls it the
kingdom of God; that is his expression for it. But one has to become alert
enough, aware enough, so that one can disidentify oneself with the habits, with
the patterns, structures, that have become ingrained in your being.
This very rich but very miserly
old man is dying, so he calls to his deathbed three men of the cloth - a rabbi,
a priest, and a minister.
When they arrive he says,
"Gentlemen, you know the old saying: You can't take it with you. Well,
taking it with me is precisely what I propose to do. And because of your
religious backgrounds, I feel I can trust you. Here, in these three boxes, is
the greater part of all my wealth. My dying wish is that each of you places one
box in my grave."
All three agree to his request,
upon which the dying man distributes the boxes and dies.
Sure enough, on the day of the
funeral, they all show up and each places a box in the grave. Later on they
decide to go to a nearby pub for a drink, where, after a long silence, the
priest at last speaks.
"Friends," says the
priest, "I am afraid I have a confession to make. I did not put all the
money in the grave. What with contributions falling off lately and the church
in need of repair, it seemed such a sin not to put some of the money where it
will do some good."
Then the minister says,
"Father, I am glad you spoke up. As you know, I am the head of several
charities. And, likewise, it seemed to me such a sin to just bury all that
money.
So I too kept some of it, of
course a small portion, to help these very worthwhile and needy charities of
mine."
After another long silence, the
priest and the minister ask the rabbi, who has been looking out the window all
this time, what he thinks about their actions.
"Well," says the
rabbi, "I must say that I am deeply surprised, not to say shocked. As a
rabbi, respecting the wishes of a dying man, I could only put in the full
amount. In fact, I gave him my own personal cheque!"
A Jew is a Jew! Whether he is a
rabbi or not does not make much difference: old habits die hard. But they can
die. And you have to make all the efforts so that they die, because in their
death is the beginning of your real life.
Question 3:
Beloved Master,
Is the indian government really so lousy as
you were saying the other day?
Pradipama, it is not really a
question of the Indian government; basically it is the Indian mind. Indian mind
is lousy; Indian government is only an expression of the Indian mind. And
because the Indian mind is lousy, whatsoever it does becomes lousy. For
centuries the Indian mind has lived in this state. There is a reason why it has
happened.
The West is not so lousy; there
is a reason for that too. Three religions were born outside of India: Judaism,
Christianity, Islam. They are all really offshoots of Judaism; Judaism is the
source of them all. Three great religions were born in India: Hinduism,
Buddhism, Jainism. They also are all offshoots of Hinduism. So, in fact in the
world there are only two basic religions: Judaism and Hinduism. And the one
basic difference between them is that Judaism believes in one life and Hinduism
believes in many lives, in reincarnation. That has made the whole difference.
If there is only one life you
have to be in a hurry. You have to do everything quick and you have to do
everything skillfully so you need not do it again, because time is short.
In the West, time is money. Because
time is so short - seventy, eighty years... half of it will be simply wasted in
sleep; most of it will be wasted in earning bread and butter, the remainder in
looking at the TV. What is left for you? Hence there is a great hurry in the
West and a great longing for speed - without ever thinking where you are going.
Everybody is going; the only
question is that one should go fast. Who cares where? - because who has time to
bother about where? The only question is: with what speed are you going?
I have heard:
An airplane was lost in the
clouds. Its many sophisticated machines were not working and the pilot informed
the passengers on the telecom, "Don't be worried. There is bad news and
there is good news too. The bad news first: that we don't know where we are
going. The good news: that we are going with such beautiful speed that you need
not worry. The speed is perfect."
In the East, Hinduism
introduced the idea of reincarnation: many many lives, millions of lives. There
is more time than you need; it is not money at all. Then there is no question
of hurry, no question of speed, no question of being skillful. You can do the
same thing again and again. You can sleep and let the time pass. If this life
goes down the drain there is nothing to worry about: there will be another life
and another, and so on, so forth.
These two ideas have created
two different kinds of people on the earth: the Western mind and the Eastern
mind. Both these ideas were created for a different reason, but when things
reach to the unconscious man he changes them according to his unconsciousness.
Both are beautiful ideas, can be of tremendous importance.
The idea that there is only one
life means that you should not waste it in unnecessary things. Don't waste it
in accumulating money, gadgets; don't waste it in superficial things. Think of
the essential, not of the accidental. That was the message behind it. But what
happened? People turned it completely upside down. They became much more
interested in the nonessential, because there is not much time, so "Eat,
drink and be merry! You are not going to be born again, so have as much as you
can have of this world."
That's what happened in the
West. The idea was to make you a seeker for the essential, but it was
transformed into its very opposite. It became: "Eat, drink and be merry,
because soon you will not be here - and you will not be coming again. Who knows
about the other world, and who knows about God, and who knows about heaven?
Don't be bothered with such
nonsense, such esoteric nonsense! You be simple, and enjoy this life as much as
you can. Live it! Squeeze every moment to your heart's content." That's
what became of the great idea that was given by Abraham and Moses to the West.
And in the East, the idea that
there are millions of lives had also a tremendously significant message. It was
to remind you that you have lived many many times in the same rotten way. You
have been moving in a wheel, you have been going in circles. Are you not bored
yet? Are you not fed up yet? Are you so stupid that you can't see the utter
futility of it all? Living for so many lives, desiring the same things,
succeeding and failing, and dying every time; have you not become aware that
something ELSE is needed? This world won't do, you have to transcend it. This
was the idea behind Patanjali, Mahavira, Krishna, Buddha, and their message.
Reincarnation simply means: be bored
with the whole idea of desiring this and that.
Be finished with it. Jump out
of this wheel of life and death. But what really happened was totally
different, just the opposite. What happened was that India became very lousy,
slow. The unconscious mind interpreted the whole message that there is no need
to be in a hurry. "There are many many lives, so why worry? We will think
of God in the old age or in the next life. There is no shortage of time, so go
slow." East has not moved at all; it is stuck. It has become undynamic,
dormant, stagnant.
This is one of the great
calamities that happens always. Whenever a conscious man gives you a certain
strategy, a certain idea to help you, you change it according to your mind, and
rather than using it as a help it becomes a harmful thing for you. You are
given nectar by the buddhas; by the time it reaches you it becomes poison.
So it is not really a question
of the Indian government; the Indian government is only an expression of the
Indian mind. The Indian mind needs a change, just as the Western mind needs a
change. Both have gone wrong. I have no preference for either. Both have
created misery for humanity up to now.
We need a new mind which will
not be either Western or Eastern - a new, global mind.
For the first time, a universal
mind is needed. And for the first time we need a man who thinks not in terms of
nations, hemispheres, races, blood, color, religions, but who thinks only in
terms of consciousness. We need to raise the consciousness of this whole
humanity.
India suffers from great
lousiness.
A guy dies and goes straight up
to paradise. Saint Peter stops him at the gate and says, "Sorry, sir, but
you can't come in. You are not registered in the paradise list. You have to go
to hell. But as you were not so bad you can choose between the Indian hell or
the German hell."
"Well," says the guy,
"before choosing I would like to know what the difference is."
"Okay, I will
explain," says Peter. "The Indian hell is a swimming pool full of
shit and you stand in it with shit right above your head and each time you try
to put your head out of the shit there is a guard who hits you on the head with
his stick till you go back under."
"And what about the German
hell?" asks the guy.
"The German hell is a
swimming pool full of shit and you stand in it with shit above your head and
each time you try to get out there is a guard who hits you on the head with his
stick."
"So," says the guy,
"I don't see much difference..."
"You know what," says
Peter. "As I am feeling pretty far out today I will tell you something: in
the Indian hell there is sometimes not enough shit, or the guard is not there, or
he forgets his stick..."
Question 4:
Beloved Master,
Do you think it is possible to measure life
and love in percentages, as you did in the lecture the other day?
Meeshael, what other day? I
have completely forgotten! My memory is not very good.
Harvey was traveling east by
train to a business convention in New Orleans. On the train he happened to read
an article in the Reader's Digest
about a seventy-five- year-old American Indian from Arizona who was reported to
have the longest memory in the world.
Since the train was passing
within a few miles of this famous Indian, Harvey decided to stop and visit him.
Sure enough, he was directed to a large teepee in the middle of an Indian
reservation. Inside the teepee an old wrinkled man was sitting crosslegged
smoking a pipe.
After exchanging a few
formalities, Harvey asked, "What did you have for breakfast on December
11, 1908?"
The Indian crossed his hands
over his chest and grunted, "Eggs!"
Harvey was immensely impressed
and left to catch his train.
Ten years later, while
traveling through Arizona, Harvey decided to stop and see if the old Indian was
still alive. Sure enough, he was led to the same teepee, but was cautioned to
enter very slowly as the old man was very old and must not be startled.
Once inside Harvey raised up
one hand and greeted him in friendly Indian style, "How!" - upon
which the old Indian grunted, "Scrambled!"
Now, I don't have that type of
memory!
Meeshael, what I can say today
I will say; I don't know about the other day.
Love and life cannot be
measured in percentages. Nothing can be measured, in fact, because the whole is
one and immeasurable. But for certain purposes it is possible to use the method
of measurement, but that is only for certain purposes.
For example, life cannot be
measured, but this can be said: that life exists only between a short range of
temperature - from ninety-eight degrees to a hundred and ten, only twelve
degrees. Beyond a hundred and ten and you are finished; fall below the normal
and you start slipping. So just twelve, fifteen degrees' span... For a certain
purpose - for a medical purpose - that's perfectly true.
Life cannot be measured if you
think of consciousness, but if you think of the mind it can be measured. Your
mind is nothing but a biocomputer - and sooner or later, computers will be
doing better than your mind. It is possible even in your life, because by the
end of this century robots will be walking on the roads - and they will look
exactly like you. And many times you will be in trouble: you may think that the
man is real or the woman is real, and the woman or the man may be just a robot.
Now scientists are thinking to
cover the mechanism of the robot with artificial, synthetic skin. They will
grow hair and they will behave exactly like you. Only once in a while you will
suspect that something is wrong - when their battery will go down. Then,
"Grrr, grrr, grrr!" Otherwise they will be perfectly okay. Just a
moment before the woman was hugging you and saying, "I love you," and
now she says, "Grrr, grrr..." The difference will only be known when
the person will fall ill: the real one will go to the hospital and the robot
will go to the factory, to the garage. Then you will know the difference;
otherwise there will be no possibility of knowing.
In fact, the ordinary man is
already nothing but a robot. Your unconscious life can be measured in
percentages and your love can also be measured in percentages - because what
love do you have? It is nothing but chemistry!
Yes, the love of a Christ or a
Buddha is immeasurable because it is transcendental to the hormones, to the
chemistry, to the physiology. But your love is hormonal. Just give an injection
of strong hormones and great love arises in you. Take a few hormones out of
you, and it falls flat on the ground; all love disappears. Your love can be
measured, but it is not love; it is just a biological urge. And your life is a
chemical phenomenon. But there is a life behind your life and there is a love
above your love that is immeasurable.
But neither is my memory very
good, nor is my mathematics very good.
Killoran was considered by most
of the villagers to be the dumbest man in the town.
One day he showed up in new
clothes and began buying rounds of drinks at the neighborhood saloon. The
neighbors wondered what had happened.
When one of them finally asked
him, Killoran replied, "I won the first prize in a big lottery."
"How did you ever guess
the lucky number?"
"Well, three times running
I dreamed of seven. So I figured it out that three times seven is twenty-four
and I bought ticket number twenty-four, and it won."
"Why, you fool, three
times seven is twenty-one, not twenty-four."
"You've got the
education," said Killoran, "I've got the lottery money."
And, Meeshael, that's what I
would like to say to you: you may know mathematics - you have got the
education, I have got the lottery money!
Question 5:
Beloved Master,
I have heard that married men live longer
than the unmarried. Is it so?
Satyadeva, meditate over
Murphy's maxim: Married men don't really live longer. It only seems that way.
And, Satyadeva, why are you
worried? I think you must be beyond sixty now. Are you thinking to get married
so as to live longer? It is time to think of something else - time to think of
death, not of marriage; time to think of the eternal, not the longer.
Even if you live to seventy,
eighty, ninety, what does it matter? What will you do? If you live ninety or a
hundred years you will do the same stupidities again and again.
What have you been doing up to
now for these sixty years? You will do the same things even if you are given
sixty years more. Think of something new!
And death is bound to come.
When you die is not important; death is absolutely certain, that is important.
After birth only one thing is certain in life and that is death; everything
else is uncertain. Don't try to escape death, don't try to avoid it. For
centuries people have been trying all kinds of ways to avoid death, but death
comes all the same.
Whether married or unmarried it
doesn't matter: you will die. You are dying!
In fact, death does not come
one day suddenly; it starts the day you are born. You start dying from the very
first breath. Each birthday is a deathday. Your life is slipping out of your
hands and you cannot escape.
An ancient Sufi parable:
A rich merchant in Baghdad sent
his servant one day to the marketplace to buy food.
But after a few minutes the
servant returned looking panic-stricken.
"Master!" he cried. "You
must lend me your best horse immediately, so that I may flee to Damascus and
thereby escape my fate."
"Whatever is the
matter?" asked the merchant.
"I went to the marketplace
and I saw Death standing there among the stallholders!" exclaimed the servant.
"He made a hostile gesture at me and started walking towards me. I beg
you, lend me your best horse so that I may flee to Damascus and escape."
The merchant was a kind man and
he did as his servant asked. Then he himself walked down to the marketplace to
see if the story was true. Sure enough, Death was standing in the crowd.
"Why did you make a
hostile gesture at my servant?" asked the merchant.
"I made no gesture of
hostility," replied Death. "I was simply very surprised to see him,
for I have an appointment with him tonight... in Damascus."
You cannot escape. Wherever you
go you will find your death waiting for you. Yes, it can be prolonged,
postponed, but what is the point? Rather than postponing, why not use this
opportunity of becoming aware of death - that it is approaching, that it is on
the way, that any moment you will be in its grip. Don't ask for the horse and
don't try to go to Damascus. You cannot escape. The only way is to transcend,
not to escape.
You ask me, "I have heard
that married men live longer than the unmarried. Is it so?"
If it is so, then what? Will
you get married? At the age of sixty it will be so stupid. A man of twenty can
be forgiven, but you cannot be forgiven.
Mr. Goldberg visited the
doctor's office, complaining that he had flying crabs. A lab test was taken,
and Mr. Goldberg anxiously waited while the doctor with a sad look came to give
him the report. "I am sorry, Mr. Goldberg," he said, "but those
flying crabs we thought you had - well, they turned out to be fruit flies. I am
sorry, but your banana is dead."
Enough for today.