Osho –
Dhammapada: The Way of The Buddha (Volume 2)
Chapter 9. Sowing
seeds of bliss
For a while the fool's mischief
Tastes sweet, sweet as honey.
But in the end it turns bitter.
And how bitterly he suffers!
For months the fool may fast,
Eating from the tip of a grass blade.
Still he is not worth a penny
Beside the master whose food is the way.
Fresh milk takes time to sour.
So a fool's mischief
Takes time to catch up with him.
Like the embers of a fire
It smoulders within him.
Whatever a fool learns,
It only makes him duller.
Knowledge cleaves his head.
For then he wants recognition.
A place before other people.
A place over other people.
"let them know my work,
Let everyone look to me for
direction."
Such are his desires,
Such is his swelling pride.
One way leads to wealth and fame,
The other to the end of the way.
Look not for recognition
But follow the awakened
And set yourself free.
The last words of Gautama the
Buddha on the earth were: Be a light unto yourself. Do not follow
others, do not imitate, because imitation, following, creates stupidity. You
are born with a tremendous possibility of intelligence. You are born with a
light within you. Listen to the still, small voice within, and that will guide
you. Nobody else can guide you, nobody else can become a model for your life,
because you are unique.
Nobody has there been ever who
was exactly like you, and nobody is ever going to be there again who will be
exactly like you. This is your glory, your grandeur - that you are utterly
irreplaceable, that you are just yourself and nobody else.
The person who follows others
becomes false, he becomes pseudo, he becomes mechanical. He can be a great
saint in the eyes of others, but deep down, he is simply unintelligent and
nothing else. He may have a very respectable character but that is only the
surface, it is not even skin-deep. Scratch him a little and you will be
surprised that inside he is a totally different person, just the opposite of
his outside.
By following others you can
cultivate a beautiful character, but you cannot have a beautiful consciousness,
and unless you have a beautiful consciousness you can never be free. You can go
on changing your prisons, you can go on changing your bondages, your slaveries.
You can be a Hindu or a Mohammedan or a Christian or a Jaina - that is not
going to help you. To be a Jaina means to follow Mahavira as the model. Now,
there is nobody who is like Mahavira or ever can be. Following Mahavira you
will become a false entity. You will lose all reality, you will lose all
sincerity, you will be untrue to yourself. You will become artificial, unnatural,
and to be artificial, to be unnatural, is the way of the mediocre, the stupid,
the fool.
Buddha defines wisdom as living
in the light of your own consciousness, and foolishness as following others,
imitating others, becoming a shadow to somebody else.
The real master creates
masters, not followers. The real master throws you back to yourself. His whole
effort is to make you independent of him, because you have been dependent for
centuries, and it has not led you anywhere. You still continue to stumble in
the dark night of the soul.
Only your inner light can
become the sunrise. The false master persuades you to follow him, to imitate
him, to be just a carbon copy of him. The real master will not allow you to be
a carbon copy, he wants you to be the original. He loves you! How can he make
you imitative? He has compassion for you, he would like you to be utterly free
- free from all outer dependencies.
But the ordinary human being
does not want to be free. He wants to be dependent. He wants somebody else to
guide him. Why? - because then he can throw the whole responsibility on the
shoulders of somebody else. And the more responsibility you throw away onto
somebody else's shoulders, the less is the possibility of your ever becoming
intelligent. It is responsibility, the challenge of responsibility, that
creates wisdom.
One has to accept life with all
its problems. One has to go through life unprotected; one has to seek and
search one's way. Life is an opportunity, a challenge, to find yourself.
But the fool does not want to
go the hard way, the fool chooses the shortcut. He says to himself,
"Buddha has attained - why should I bother? I will just watch his behavior
and imitate. Jesus has attained, so why should I search and seek? I can simply
become a shadow to Jesus. I can simply go on following him wherever he
goes."
But following somebody else,
how are you going to become intelligent? You will not give any chance for your
intelligence to explode. It needs a challenging life, an adventurous life, a life
that knows how to risk and how to go into the unknown, for intelligence to
arise. And only intelligence can save you - nobody else - your own
intelligence, mind you, your own awareness, can become your nirvana.
Be a light unto yourself and
you will be wise; let others become your leaders, your guides, and you will
remain stupid, and you will go on missing all the treasures of life - - which
were yours! And how can you decide that the other's character is a right
character for you to follow?
A Buddha lives in his own way,
a Mahavira in his, a Jesus still different. A Mohammed is Mohammed, he is not
Mahavira. Whom are you going to follow? Just by the accidents of birth you are
going to decide your life, your destiny? Then you will remain accidental. And the
fool is accidental. The wise man never lives by accidents. He does not become a
Hindu because he is born in a Hindu family; he does not become a Christian
because his parents are Christian; he does not become a communist because he is
born in Russia. He seeks, he inquires.
Life is a tremendously
beautiful pilgrimage, but only for those who are ready to seek and search.
Jesus says: Seek and ye shall
find; ask and it shall be given to you; knock and the doors shall be opened
unto you.
He is not saying: Follow,
imitate. He is not saying: Be a Christian and the doors shall be opened unto
you. He is not saying: I have knocked on the doors and opened them for you. He
is saying: Knock and the doors shall be opened unto you. And everybody has to
knock, because everybody has to enter by different doors. People are so unique,
people are individuals.
This is your glory. Don't deny
it; otherwise you will remain a fool. That does not mean don't learn from the
buddhas, the awakened ones - learn! Imbibe the spirit! Drink out of their
springs, fresh springs of joy. Be in their company, become attuned to their
inner music, listen to their harmony, and be filled with great joy that a man
like you, just like you, has achieved, so you can also achieve. Become thrilled
that a man just like you, made of blood and bones, has become enlightened, so
you can also become enlightened.
A buddha has not to be followed
but understood. A buddha has not to be imitated but listened to - listened to
in tremendous silence, love, trust. And the more you understand a buddha, the
more you will feel he is speaking not from the outside but from within, from
the very core of your being. He is a mirror who reflects your original face -
but he is only a mirror. All great masters are mirrors, they reflect your
original face. But don't cling to the mirror. The mirror is not your face!
These sutras of Buddha are of
immense value. Go into them meditatively. And when I say go into them
meditatively, I mean don't be in an argumentative mood - that is not the way to
listen. Be in a receptive mood, be feminine. Don't be on guard, don't be
defensive. Don't hide behind armors. Don't bring your mind in to interpret what
is being said. Put the mind aside and let the heart dance with these sutras.
That's what I mean when I say listen meditatively. Let the heart rejoice. And
in that rejoicing is a totally different kind of understanding - not of the
intellect but of intelligence.
You will not become
knowledgeable if you listen from the heart; you will become more and more wise.
If you listen from the head, in the first place your listening will be
distorted because all your prejudices will become mingled with it, and all your
a priori conclusions will be a distraction, and your mind will give its color
to what is told to you. In the first place you won't listen to what is being
said; your mind will make much noise and you will listen to your own noise. In
the second place, whatsoever you gather will become knowledge, not wisdom.
Knowledge is superficial, it does not go deep, it cannot go deep. Knowledge is
a way to hide your ignorance, it does not destroy it.
Wisdom is a light, it dispels
darkness.
But wisdom is always of the
heart, remember, it is never of the head. When you come to a buddha, forget all
about your head. It is a totally different approach to your being - through the
heart. Listen through the heartbeats, become attuned - as if you are listening
to great music. It IS great music; in fact, what greater music can there be?
These sutras are the greatest
poetry, the poetry of the ultimate being. These sutras are the lotus flowers,
born in the lake of a consciousness of one who is awakened. Listen attentively,
meditatively, lovingly, in deep trust, and you will be immensely benefited,
blessed.
The first sutra:
For a while the fool's mischief
Tastes sweet, sweet as honey.
But in the end it turns bitter.
And how bitterly he suffers!
There is a famous Buddhist
parable. Buddha loved to tell it again and again:
A man is being chased by his
enemies. They are coming closer and closer; he can hear the sound of the hooves
of the horses coming closer and closer every moment. It is death! And there
seems to be no way to escape, because he has come to a cul-de-sac, the road
ends. He is facing a great abyss. If he jumps he is bound to die. He cannot
turn back because the enemy is going to kill him. He was hoping that there may
be one chance if he jumps - he may become crippled, but maybe, by a miracle, he
may survive - but that too seems to be impossible because he sees deep in the
abyss two lions looking up at him, ready to devour him.
Finding no other way - cannot
go back, cannot go ahead - he hangs from the roots of a tree, just in the
middle. It is a cold morning, his hands are becoming frozen. He knows within minutes
he will not be able to hold the roots at all; his hands are slipping, he is
losing his grip. He knows death is becoming more certain every moment.
And then he sees that two mice,
one black, one white, are eating the root, cutting the root. Those two mice
represent day and night - they represent time, which is cutting everybody's
life root. Day and night, death is coming closer. So now it becomes even more
absolutely certain that it is only a question of moments and he will be gone.
The root is becoming weaker every moment, thinner every moment. The mice are at
work; his hands are getting frozen and he can hear the lions roaring deep in
the valley and he can hear the enemy approaching closer and closer. You can
understand that man's plight.
And then suddenly he sees that
just on the top of the tree there is a bees' nest, and a drop of honey is just
slipping out of the nest. He forgets all about the enemies, all about the
roaring lions, the white and black mice, his hands getting frozen - in a moment,
he completely forgets everything. His whole mind becomes focused on that drop
of honey.
He opens his mouth, the honey
drops on his tongue... and it is so sweet.
This the situation of the fool.
This is the situation of every man on the earth. How sweet it tastes! But how
long can this taste remain? Soon death will be arriving from all directions.
But that's how we go on living - living for momentary pleasures, indulgence,
food, sex, money, power, prestige... just drops of honey. How sweet it tastes,
and in that moment we completely forget what is going to happen. The moment
takes possession of us and we become oblivious of the reality of life: that it
is rooted in death, that it is going to disappear.
Buddha says: for a while the
fool's mischief tastes sweet, sweet as honey. But in the end it turns bitter.
And how bitterly he suffers!
Watch yourself. What are you
doing here on the earth? What have you done up to now?
What does your life consist of?
Have you done anything really real, or have you just been living in dreams?
Have you approached in any way the eternal? Or are you too much occupied with
the momentary? Have you made any plans, any projects, for the ultimate truth?
Or are you just remaining drunk with the mundane, with the ordinary, going into
the same rut every day, moving in the same rut every day? The morning comes and
you rush to the marketplace, and the evening comes and you are tired and you
come home... and the same circle goes on moving, the same wheel. And this has
been going on and on for so many lives. When are you going to become bored with
it?
When are you going to become a
little more alert about what you are doing to your life?
This is a sheer wastage.
But Buddha says: Certainly,
there is some sweetness, momentary, and one suffers for that sweetness. It
turns, inevitably, into bitterness. Watch your life. You can earn much money,
and while you are earning it tastes sweet. But you are not aware that you are
losing your life in earning rubbish, that life is slipping out of your hands,
that it is a very costly affair that you are pursuing, utterly foolish, stupid.
The life cannot be bought back;
not even a single moment, with all your wealth, can you purchase back. It
cannot be claimed back. Such precious time being wasted! You are piling up
wealth which will be taken away by death, and you will go empty-handed... as
empty-handed as you had come to the earth. Then you will feel the bitterness of
it, that you wasted your whole life for something which is not going to be with
you. You wasted your whole life in power, politics; you wasted your whole life
in becoming respectable, and now death has come and all will be taken away. And
you have not tasted a single moment of your eternal reality - you have not
tasted anything deathless.
This is what Buddha calls the
fool's approach towards life. Everything turns bitter: your love, your
friendship, your family, your business, your politics... everything, finally,
proves to be poisonous, turns into bitterness. One who is wise will become
aware while there is still time and something can be done.
For months the fool may fast,
Eating from the tip of a grass blade.
Still he is not worth a penny
Beside the master whose food is the way.
Buddha is not saying become an
ascetic. Buddha is not saying renounce the world, renounce food, starve
yourself, fast, torture your body - he is not saying that. He cannot say it. He
has learned a lesson, a great lesson by doing all these things himself.
When he left his palace he
followed the traditional path for six years, torturing himself, fasting,
destroying his body. He came to a point when he was almost on the verge of
death - he had tortured himself too much. In that moment he became aware,
"What am I doing? First I was indulging, my whole day and night was devoted
to indulgence: women, wine, good food, clothes, palaces, golden chariots,
hunting... That was my life, the life of
a prince. I was doing something which proved futile."
He was only twenty-nine when he
left his palace - must have been a man of great intelligence. There are people
who are seventy or seventy-nine and they have not yet become aware of the
foolishness of their lives. He was only twenty-nine. Must have been a man of
rare insight. Must have been watching, looking at what he was doing, meditating
over things. Suddenly he became aware, "This whole thing is rubbish - all
these women, all this wine, hunting, all this indulgence is not going to give
me anything eternal."
The East has always been in
search of the eternal. The definition of truth in the East is:
that which is eternal. And the
definition of untruth? - that which is momentary. When the Eastern mystics say
that something is illusory, they mean it is momentary. They don't mean that it
is not, they know it is, but it is only for the moment, like a soap bubble. It
is! And sometimes a soap bubble can look really beautiful. If sunrays pass
through it, it can be surrounded by a rainbow, all the colors. A soap bubble
is, but its isness is so momentary, so deceptive, that it is better to say that
it is not; hence the Eastern mystics say the world is MAYA - illusory. NOT that
it is not, but it is so momentary that it is almost pointless whether it is or
it is not. It is better to call it illusory, because that will make you alert,
wakeful.
Those twenty-nine years were
enough to make him aware that he was playing with soap bubbles. He escaped, he
renounced the kingdom. But as it almost always happens, mind moves to the
opposite. Mind is like the pendulum of an old clock: goes from right to left,
from left to right - to the opposite. It never stays in the middle. And in the
middle is the secret. If the pendulum stops in the middle, the clock stops,
time stops, the world stops. But the pendulum goes from the left to the right,
from the right to the left, and it keeps the clock running, it keeps the clock
moving - it keeps TIME alive. And time is the world.
To go beyond time is to know
something deathless; hence, in India, for time and death we use the same word, Kal -
the same word for time and the same word for death. It is not coincidental, it
has a significance. Time is death, because in time everything is momentary,
everything is going to die. One moment it is, another moment it is gone, and
gone forever. The moment you go beyond time, you go beyond death.
But just as the mind functions
- it moves to the opposite - Buddha's mind also moved to the opposite. He
escaped from the palace. Up to now he had cared about his body; now he started
torturing the body. Up to now he was too obsessed with good food; now he
started fasting, long fasts. He became a famous ascetic. People started
respecting him, people started following him. He was a beautiful man, one of
the most beautiful who has ever walked on the earth, but these six years of
self-torture and masochism destroyed his body. He became dark, he became thin,
he became ugly.
But one day the great insight
arose in him, "What am I doing? First I was obsessed with food, now I am
obsessed with fasting - basically I am still obsessed with food. First it was a
positive obsession, now it is a negative obsession. But I have not changed a
little bit. First I was obsessed with women, now I am obsessed with Brahmacharya -
celibacy. Basically I have not changed - I am still obsessed with sex. First I
was running towards sex, now I am running away from sex, but sex remains the
center of my being."
The revelation was great. That
very revelation created the context in which he became enlightened. The evening
he understood this, something tremendously important happened to him. He
laughed at the whole ridiculousness of his mind. He laughed at the tricky mind
- that he was thinking that he was going against mind, but he was not going
against mind - mind had played a trick. Mind had befooled him, mind had cheated
him. Mind had come from the back door. First it was coming from the front door,
now it was coming from the back door, and it is more dangerous when it comes
from the back door. By the front door at least you are aware of what you are
doing.
When it comes from the back
door, indirectly, in a subtle way, hiding, it comes hidden behind a facade.
Mind is so cunning that it can
hide in the garments of its very opposite. From indulgence it can become
asceticism, from being a materialist it can become a spiritualist, from being
worldly it can become otherworldly. But mind IS mind - whether you are for the
world or against the world you remain encaged in the mind.
For or against, both are parts
of the mind.
When mind disappears, mind
disappears in a choiceless awareness, when you stop choosing, when you are
neither for nor against - that is stopping in the middle. One choice leads to
the left, one extreme; another choice leads to the right, the other extreme.
If you don't choose, you are
exactly in the middle. That is relaxation, that is rest. That is TRUE
renunciation. It is not opposed to the world, it is not opposed to the body, it
has nothing to do with the body. It is sheer awakening of consciousness. You
become choiceless, unobsessed, and in that state of unobsessed, choiceless
consciousness, intelligence arises which has been lying deep, dormant in your
being. You become a light unto yourself. You are no longer a fool.
From indulgence you can move to
repression; that is not going to help. That's where all the religions have got
hooked.
The head nun is held up one
evening while coming back from the bank where she has deposited the charity
collection of the week. "You are wasting your time, young man," she
tells the robber. "I have no money. I put it all in the night deposit at
the bank."
"We will see about
that," he says grimly, and begins rumpling up under her black gown to
search for the money.
"Oh! What are you
doing?" she cries. "Oh! Oh!! Oh Jesus, Mary! Don't stop now - I will
write you a cheque!"
Repression is not the way,
cannot be the way. All that you have repressed is waiting for its opportunity.
It has simply gone into the unconscious - it can come back any moment. Any
provocation and it will surface. You are not free of it. Repression is not the way
to freedom. Repression is a far worse kind of bondage than indulgence, because
through indulgence one becomes tired sooner or later, but through repression
one never becomes tired.
See the point: indulgence is
bound to tire you and bore you. Sooner or later you will start thinking how to
get rid of it all. But repression will keep things alive. Because you have not
lived, how can you be bored? You have not lived; how can you be fed up?
Because you have not lived, the
charm continues, the hypnosis continues; deep down, it waits.
And the people who indulge are
in a way normal compared to the people who repress; the repressing person
becomes pathological. The indulgent is at least natural - that's how nature has
made you - but to repress is to become unnatural. It is easy to go from lower
nature to higher nature. It is very difficult to go from being unnatural to
higher nature. Buddha calls the ultimate truth, "ultimate nature" - Aes Dhammo
Sanantano. This is the ultimate nature, the ultimate law, he declares.
What is the ultimate law? The eternal, the undying, the pure consciousness.
It is easy to reach this
eternal law from nature, because nature is lower but still it is nature. And
from the lower to the higher you can step; the lower can become a stepping-stone.
But the moment you become unnatural it becomes very difficult. From being
unnatural, there is no way to supreme nature.
Hence, my suggestion is: if you
are going to choose, choose indulgence rather than repression. The best thing
is not to choose, to remain choiceless, to be just a witness, to see your
instincts, desires, and not get identified with them, for or against. The best
thing is just to be a witness because in witnessing, in the fire of witnessing,
all desires are burned - not only desires, but the very seeds of desires are
burned. One becomes Nirbeej - seedless.
But don't choose the negative.
Once you become repressive, you become pathological, you are ill. In fact, only
pathological people become interested in repressive systems of thought.
All the nuns but one in a
Belgian nunnery are found to be pregnant just after the war.
The cardinal makes a personal
inquiry and learns that the nuns have all been raped by German soldiers.
"But why didn't they rape
you?" he asks of the one thin, little, ugly and repulsive looking nun who
is not pregnant.
"Who, me?" she says.
"I resisted!"
The pathological can also find
rationalizations. You know the old Aesop's fable?
The fox says, "The grapes
are sour," because the fox could not get to the grapes - they were too
high. She looked around, she tried hard to reach, but the grapes were too high,
beyond her reach. She looked around, there was nobody. She walked away, but a
hare was watching, hidden behind a bush. And the hare said, "Auntie, what
happened?
Couldn't you get to the
grapes?"
The fox said, "No, it is
not a question of getting to the grapes - they are not yet ripe, they are very
sour."
The people who cannot get to
the grapes can rationalize that they are sour. These rationalizations may
deceive others, but how can they deceive you? The fox knows perfectly well that
she had not been able to reach. Now, it is a rationalization, and mind is very
clever in rationalizing.
Jake came home in the middle of
the afternoon. He was met at the door by his wife and his son. His son
exclaimed, "Dad, there is a bogeyman in the closet!"
Jake rushed to the closet and
flung the door open. There, huddled among the coats was his partner, Sam.
"Sam," shrieked Jake, "why in hell do you come here in the afternoon
and scare my kid?"
Mind is very cunning and clever
in rationalizing things, in finding ways and means.
The mind can suggest repression
to you very easily, because if you repress you will be far more in the power of
the mind than you ever were when you were in the life of indulgence. And the
mind will have a far stronger grip on you.
Buddha learned it through his
own experience - six years of great torture. With Buddha the world entered into
a new phase of religiousness. Before Buddha nobody had said this: that
repressiveness, austerities, fasting, torturing your body, is not going to
help.
With Buddha, humanity entered
into a new phase, a higher phase.
Buddha is a very very
significant milestone in the evolution of human consciousness, but he has not
been understood rightly, because again the interpreters were those old
scholars, pundits, priests. They again interpreted Buddha in such a way... they
started interpreting Buddha almost completely against his own experience. They
started talking much about those six years; Buddhist scriptures are full of the
description of those six years. And if you read Buddhist scriptures you will
find that it seems as if it is because of those six years of austerities that
he attained enlightenment. It is not so. It is not by those six years of
austerities that he attained enlightenment; he attained enlightenment the day
he dropped all those austerities. It was by dropping them that he attained
enlightenment, not by or through them.
But if you read the scriptures,
particularly those written in India, you will be given a totally false
impression. They make it appear as if Buddha has not contributed anything new
to human consciousness, as if he is just the old type of ascetic - maybe far
more intelligent in expressing, far more convincing, logical, far more
deep-going in his insight, but nothing new. It is the same old religion which
he has brought in new words, with new logic; the same old wine in a new bottle,
that's all. That's what Indians have made Buddha look like. That is a
falsification. Buddha does not represent the old.
He is a stepping beyond the
old. He is a new phase. And just as he took a new step, again another step is
needed. Twenty-five centuries have passed.
My new commune is going to be
that new step - a further step in human evolution, in human consciousness.
Although Buddha dropped
asceticism, he did not talk much against it; he could not, because he had to
communicate with people who were full of the ancient lore and the ancient
ideology. He had to talk to people who would have been absolutely incapable of
understanding if he had talked like me. Even I am not comprehensible to people.
Twenty-five centuries have
passed and people are still stuck. It is very rare to find a contemporary.
People are in the twentieth century, but only physically; spiritually they are
thousands of years back. Buddha could not even make an effort. He did say to
his closest disciples, "It is not through asceticism that I have attained.
I have attained by dropping asceticism - that was all foolishness." These
sutras were given to his closest disciples.
He says: for months the fool may fast, eating from
the tip of a grass blade. Still he is not worth a penny beside the master whose
food is the way.
If you really want a transformation,
then make dhamma your food - let the very way to God be your food. Nourish
yourself on it! Jesus says it in another way: Eat me! He says to his disciples:
Drink me! Absorb me, digest me!
Buddha says: ... Whose food is
the way. The way means dhamma, religion, the ultimate law, that
keeps the whole world in harmony. One who starts eating out of this harmony,
that one attains - not by fasting. It is not by fasting from the gross food,
but by eating the subtle food that one attains.
Yes, there is a subtle food
available. When you look at a roseflower, just watch. Let the beauty of the
rose be absorbed in you, and you will feel nourished. You have not eaten the
rose but something subtle that surrounds the rose, the aura of the rose, the
dance of the rose in the wind, the fragrance which is invisible. Have you not
felt it? Seeing a beautiful flower, suddenly you feel saturated, contented.
Looking at the sky full of stars, have you not felt nourished? Watching the
sunrise or the sunset, or just listening to the faraway call of a cuckoo, a
distant song, have you not felt yourself becoming full of something unknown... ?
Your body needs food, your soul
also needs food. The bodily food is gross, obviously; the body is part of the
gross world. The spiritual food is invisible - in music, in poetry, in beauty,
in dance, in song, in prayer, in meditation... and you go deeper and deeper
towards the spiritual nourishment.
Buddha says: It is not by
dropping the gross food, by fasting, that one attains, but by eating the way. A
strange expression - by eating the dhamma. What is dhamma? Just the other day
somebody asked, "Beloved Master, I love it when you say: Aes Dhammo
Sanantano, but what exactly does it mean?" It means the harmony
of existence, it means the melody of existence, it means the ultimate dance
that is going on and on. It means the celebration that is everywhere. The trees
are celebrating and the birds and the animals and the rivers and the mountains...
this whole existence is made of the stuff called bliss.
That's what Buddha means when
he says: Aes
Dhammo Sanantano - this is the ultimate law, inexhaustible. You can
go on eating out of it, but you cannot exhaust it.
And the more you eat, the more
soul you will have. The more you eat it, the more divine you become. Buddha is
saying: I am not teaching fasting - I am teaching you a new way of indulgence,
a higher kind of indulgence. He is not saying it exactly in that way, but I am
saying it. I am teaching you a higher way of love, a higher way of rejoicing, a
higher way of dance, a higher way of absorbing God's energy into yourself - -
becoming more and more receptive and feminine so you can be pregnant with God.
He calls the man a fool who
goes on fasting. But those fools are worshipped in India, and not only in India
- almost all over the world. In fact, the majority of the crowd consists of
fools; hence, whenever a fool starts following the rotten, trodden path, the
traditional path of the crowds, the crowds are very much thrilled. Their egos
are very much satisfied. This man proves that they have been right, their
parents have been right, their heritage is proved right: "Look, this man
is fasting!" And spiritual people have always been fasting - that is their
idea.
Yes, sometimes it has happened
that a spiritual person has fasted, but the reason is totally different from
what you think. Mahavira fasted, and fasted for twelve years, and for long long
periods. It is said that in those twelve years he took food for only three
hundred and sixty-five days - that means only one year. One month he would fast
and he would take food for one day; in twelve years, one year means that mostly
after twelve days he ate on one day - average. That was his way of fasting.
But Mahavira never became tired
and Buddha became tired after six years. What was the matter? And he attained
as much as Buddha attained. Buddha attained by dropping his fasting and
austerity; Mahavira never dropped it. Now, both cannot be right - and I say to
you both are right. But the reasons are so different, almost inconceivable.
Mahavira's fast has a totally
different quality. He is not an ascetic, he is not fasting - in fact, he is
eating so much of God that he does not feel the need to eat. His soul is so
overflowing with subtle energies that his body feels satisfied. He does not
feel the need to eat. In fact, to say that he fasts is not right. If I am
allowed then I will say: he cannot eat. And you have also sometimes observed
it.
When I used to come to Poona, I
used to stay with Sohan, and she was very much puzzled. One day she asked me,
"What is the matter? Once or twice a year you come to Poona. I wait the
whole year long - you will be coming, you will be coming - and then for three
or four days you come. For these three or four days I cannot eat at all. What
is the reason why I can't eat? I am not fasting," she told me. "I
want to eat, but I simply can't eat. I feel so full."
I told her, "Whenever you
are tremendously happy, you will not be able to eat. Your blissfulness is so
overflowing it leaves no appetite, it leaves no emptiness in you. Not only is
your soul overflowing, your body starts being affected by the soul. Your body
is a shadow to your soul."
You will be surprised:
miserable people eat more, happy people less. A miserable person feels so empty
that he wants to fill himself, stuff himself with something or other. The
miserable person goes on eating, he goes on stuffing this and that inside. He
feels so utterly empty and lost that he does not know what to do. It seems easy
to go to the fridge and eat something more; maybe that will give you a feeling
of fullness. And certainly it does give, on the very gross level, a feeling of
fullness.
Now, America suffers most from
overeating, and the reason is simple: America is now suffering from great inner
emptiness. The reason is spiritual, hence no dieting can help.
And how long can you diet? You
can diet for a few days with great willpower; you have to force yourself. Then
after a few days you become tired of making the effort and then you jump upon
the food with a vengeance; and you will gain more weight than you had lost by
dieting.
In America this is a problem.
In all rich countries this is going to be a problem, because you have food and
you have emptiness both available. Only food is left to fill yourself with, sex
is left to fill yourself with. Go on purchasing new gadgets, new things; if you
cannot have anything else you can at least go on accumulating furniture. You
can fill the house if you cannot fill your being. Just a vicarious way of
feeling full. Just the opposite happens when you are really happy, joyous, when
you are flying, when you are feeling weightless.
I told Sohan, "This is
perfectly logical. This is real fasting!"
In Sanskrit, the word for
'fast' has a beauty of its own. The English word does not have that quality.
The English word 'fast' simply means starving through willpower. The Sanskrit
word is UPAWAS - it means 'being close to God'. Literally it means being close
to God; it has nothing to do with fasting. It means being so close to God, so
full of God, that you forget all about your body, that you forget all about
your body nourishment. You are so nourished by the subtle food, the subtle
energy, that goes on showering on you.
Mahavira was not fasting in the
same way that Buddha was; Mahavira was eating God, and Buddha was simply
fasting. Mahavira's fast was upawas - being close to God. His fast was what it
means in Sanskrit; Buddha's fast was what it means in English - just starving.
Hence Mahavira attained without dropping his fast. It was not fasting in the
first place - there was no need to drop it. Buddha had to drop it, it was just
the opposite of indulgence. He was simply starving himself with the motive that
by starvation one can attain.
How can you attain God by
starving the body? What logic is this? What scientific reasoning is there in
it? Do you think God is someone like Adolf Hitler who enjoys your tortures? who
enjoys seeing his children hungry and dreaming of food? who enjoys seeing
people becoming ugly, ill? God is compassion, God is love. He would like you to
be full of him. And when you are full of him you may not feel the need to eat.
Mahavira was not fasting, he was simply not feeling like eating, that's all.
And that's a great difference.
Buddha says: for months the fool may fast, eating from
the tip of a grass blade. Still he is not worth a penny beside the master whose
food is the way.
One day he discovered that
there is another kind of food: one can eat out of the harmony of existence, one
can become part of the harmony, one can become part of the celebration, the
festivity that goes on and on, with no beginning and no end. Then you are full
and fulfilled.
Fresh milk takes time to sour.
So a fool's mischief
Takes time to catch up with him.
Like the embers of a fire
It smoulders within him.
If you do something, it takes
time for its result to come. And you may not even be able to connect the two,
the cause and the effect.
Do you know that in Africa,
still there are primitive tribes which have no conception that the birth of a
child has anything to do with intercourse - because the gap is so big, nine
months. And not only is the gap so big... and they have no way of calculating
time, so for them nine months is really a long time; they cannot keep track of
time. They have no calendar, no watches, no idea of time at all. They live in a
really primitive world where time has not been invented yet, so how can they
conceive that the intercourse between a man and a woman can be the cause of the
birth of a child?
And then there are other
reasons: it doesn't always happen. You may make love to a woman and there may
come no child, so it is not an inevitable thing. Then how is the child born?
The child is born not by intercourse, not by sexual relationship, it has no
biology behind it - it comes as a gift from God, whomsoever he chooses. If you
follow the tribe's religion, you will be blessed with children; otherwise there
is no possibility.
When Christian missionaries for
the first time discovered this tribe, they could not believe that these people
for centuries have lived, given birth to children, and have no idea at all of
cause and effect. And that's how we all are, in so many ways - primitive.
Today suddenly you start
feeling sad for no reason at all; you cannot find any reason in close proximity
- nothing has happened. In the night when you had gone to bed, everything was
good; you were flowing, glowing, and in the morning you are suddenly sad.
Nobody has insulted you, nothing has happened, no bad news has arrived... why?
From where has this sadness
come? You must have done something; maybe there is a time gap, maybe three
months' gap or three years. And those who have gone deep into this phenomenon,
they say maybe even in the past life... sometimes a few seeds take very long to
sprout.
And because of this, the fool
goes on living in the same way, in the same foolish way, because he cannot see
that his life's suffering is caused by his own choices. Those choices may have
been made long before. You may have thrown the seeds a year before, and then
you have completely forgotten about those seeds. Rains come, the seeds start
sprouting, and you are surprised - from where? From where are these plants
coming up? And, of course, the seeds that we go on sowing in our souls are very
very invisible. You may have been angry, violent, jealous, and it has remained
inside you.
Buddha says: like the embers
of a fire it smoulders within him. It goes on inside you, getting
ready, waiting for the spring to come, and then it explodes suddenly. Man is
responsible for whatsoever happens to him. The wise man becomes aware of it and
stops sowing seeds of misery and starts sowing seeds of joy. Sooner or later
you will be ready to reap the harvest.
That's what heaven is: a wise
man sowing seeds of bliss, love, compassion. And one day the garden is ready.
Do you know? - the word 'paradise' comes from Persian, has a beautiful meaning.
In Persian it is FIRDAUS; from 'firdaus' it has become 'paradise' in English.
'Firdaus' means a walled garden of truth. If you go on sowing seeds of joy,
beauty, dance, song, meditation, prayer, soon you will create a walled garden
of truth - that is paradise. Otherwise, you are bound to create hell. Live
unconsciously, live mechanically, live foolishly, and hell is going to be the
outcome of it.
Whatever a fool learns,
It only makes him duller.
Knowledge cleaves his head.
The fool is not very much
interested in becoming intelligent, because intelligence is dangerous.
Intelligence is rebellious, hence it is dangerous. Intelligence brings
individuality to you, and the moment you become an integrated individual the
crowds start turning against you; they cannot tolerate an individual. They
cannot forgive a Jesus or a Buddha. They are very happy with the fools, because
the fools are just like them - in fact, a little more magnified, a little more
decorated, a little more sophisticated. They are very happy with the fools.
They are happy with politicians, they are happy with professors, they are happy
with pundits but they are not happy with a Jesus or a Socrates or a Buddha.
Why? - because the presence of a buddha makes them look stupid. The very
presence of a buddha and they start feeling silly. How can they forgive him?
And they don't want to be intelligent
themselves, because it is a long journey and there is no shortcut to it. It is
hard, arduous. To become intelligent means to sharpen your consciousness
continuously; to become intelligent means to be full of love. Love is the
center of intelligence, logic the center of intellectuality.
The fool becomes intellectual;
then he can brag that he knows. He is interested in knowledge. He will read the
Bible and the Vedas and the Koran, he will cram information. He turns his mind
into a computer, he becomes a walking Encyclopaedia Britannica. That is easy, that
is simple, that can be done by a machine; it does not need any intelligence.
And your schools, colleges and universities only make people computers.
We have yet to create
universities where intelligence is sharpened. Our universities only dull the
intelligence because they prepare slaves for the society. The universities are
in the service of the vested interests; they are agents of the established
status quo. They don't serve the future of humanity, they serve the past, they
serve the dead. They are not interested in creating people who are intelligent,
creative, alert, aware; they are interested in people who are dull, stupid, but
efficient. Clerks, deputy collectors, stationmasters - efficient! They can just
do their work very efficiently. And remember, machines are more efficient than
men, so they are not interested in men; they are interested in reducing men to
machines.
Buddha says: whatever a fool
learns, it only makes him duller. The more knowledge he gathers, the
more dull he becomes, the more stupid he becomes.
And that is my observation too.
I have seen ignorant villagers far more intelligent than the so-called Ph.D.'s
and D.Litt.'s and professors of the universities, deans, vice- chancellors and
chancellors. They seem to be the dullest people in the world.
A villager, a woodcutter, seems
to be far more intelligent. He has no information, of course; he is not
knowledgeable - but he is innocent, and innocence is part of intelligence. To
be knowledgeable is to be machinelike - and machines are dull. Have you ever
seen any machine which is intelligent? Just look at the machine, and look at
the dean and the vice-chancellor... !
In fact, the duller you are,
the greater is the possibility that you will become a vice- chancellor -
because the politicians will not like a Buddha to become a vice-chancellor,
they will not allow Socrates to become a vice-chancellor. This was the crime
Socrates was accused of: that he was corrupting youth. Socrates, and corrupting
youth? And these fools - the magistrates and the vice-chancellors and the prime
ministers and the presidents - these fools are not corrupting? Socrates is
corrupting the youth - what do they mean by it?
In a way, they are right: he is
corrupting the youth because he is preparing them for the future. He has to
destroy the past, he has to create doubt, inquiry, he has to create seekers,
not believers. And the society wants believers, and the dull people are good
believers. A Mohammedan, a Christian, a Hindu, a Jaina - the duller they are,
the more they believe, the better they believe... because the dull person
cannot inquire, he cannot risk. He is afraid:he knows that he is not capable of
knowing the truth on his own, he has to believe somebody else.
Knowledge cleaves his head, says
Buddha. Knowledge does not help him but becomes a burden, a Himalayan weight on
his being.
For then he wants recognition,
A place before other people,
A place over other people.
His whole knowledge becomes an
ego trip, and the ego is the greatest bondage there is.
To be free of ego is to be
redeemed. But the fool learns just to become famous, to be recognized as an
authority, to be an expert. The fool accumulates knowledge so that he can brag
and exhibit, so that he can show people how intelligent he is. And intelligence
is not of the ego; intelligence comes only when you are in a deep egoless
state.
Intelligence is the
disappearance of ego, meeting and merging with the whole, forgetting your
separation, becoming a wave in the ocean of God - then you are intelligent.
"Let them know my work,
Let everyone look to me for
direction."
Such are his desires,
Such is his swelling pride.
One way leads to wealth and fame...
Buddha says: But let me make
you aware that if you want wealth and fame, then follow the way of the fool -
because the foolish person is capable of becoming famous more easily than the
intelligent person. If the intelligent person becomes famous, that is just
accidental - he never tries. If the intelligent person is well known, that is
not because of his effort. His fragrance may have reached people, but there is
no positive effort on his side to be recognized. He knows his being, he does
not depend on others' recognition.
He knows who he is, he does not
need anybody else's certificate.
When I came out of the
university I went to see the education minister. I told him, "These are my
qualifications. If you can give me some place anywhere, any place will be
okay." He looked at my qualifications, was very much impressed - people
are impressed by nonsense - because I was a gold-medallist, first-class, first.
He was very much impressed. He said, "Immediately I will appoint you as a
lecturer. But one thing you will have to do: have you got a character certificate?"
I said, "I have got a
character, but no character certificate. Look into my eyes, hold my hand! I can
hug you... !"
He said, "But that... that
is not the point. Where is the character certificate?"
I said, "I have got no
character certificate."
He said, "You can go to
the vice-chancellor, or the head of your department - just one character
certificate. It is a formality."
I said, "I cannot ask the
vice-chancellor, because I don't believe that he has any character at all! What
weight will his certificate carry? And the head of my department? - I know him
more than he knows himself. I cannot give him a character certificate!"
He was very much puzzled. He
really wanted to help. In fact, he became really interested in me also. He had
never come across such a man - so many people must have approached him, but
nobody had said, "Look into my eyes, or hold my hand and feel! Or I can
come and live with you for one week, in your house. Just see my character in
every possible way. I will not even lock the door of my bathroom. I will keep
everything open, so you can just go on watching... !"
He said, "These things are
not needed at all! Just a simple character certificate."
So I said, "Then I can
write a simple character certificate to myself" - and that's what I did. I
wrote a certificate, in front of him, and he said, "What are you doing?
But this has never been done: you yourself giving a character certificate to
yourself? Somebody else's signature is needed!"
So I said, "Okay, then I
will sign for the head of my department, on his behalf. This is a true
copy," I told him, "and the original I will take from the head of my
department."
So I went to the head of my
department. I said, "I have given this character certificate in your name
- you please give the original."
He said, "This is strange!
The original is needed FIRST." But he loved the idea and he gave me an
original.
One way leads to wealth and fame...
If you follow the fool's way, you can become very rich, you can become famous.
You can become a president of a country, a prime minister of a country - you
can become anything. You can have as much wealth as you want - just follow the
fool's way. Don't be intelligent, remain stupid, because in fact, except for a
stupid person who wants to run after money? Yes, sometimes it happens, money
comes to the intelligent person, but it comes running after him, he does not go...
Fame also sometimes comes to the
intelligent person. It comes on its own; he is not interested at all.
... The other to the end of the way.
But if you want to end this
whole nonsense that has persisted down the ages for so many lives, the same
repetitive wheel of birth and death moving; if you want to stop it, then the
other, the way of the intelligent person, the way of the wise... be a light
unto yourself.
Look
not for recognition
But
follow the awakened
And
set yourself free.
Don't be bothered, don't desire
recognition. If millions of fools recognize you, what does it matter? Millions
of fools recognizing you simply proves that you are a greater fool than them.
Nothing else is proved.
But follow the awakened... What does Buddha mean when he says follow the
awakened? He does not mean imitate. He simply means become awakened
as the awakened has become awakened. Be awake - that is following the awakened.
Not following in the details: how he lives, what he eats, when he goes to sleep
- that is stupidity. Follow the awakened in becoming awake.
And set yourself free - because
it is only awareness, the state of an awakened consciousness that brings
freedom. Intelligence is freedom. Meditation is freedom.
Awareness is freedom. And those
who live mechanically, unconsciously, unintelligently, they live in prisons.
And to live in a prison is to suffer.
Freedom is the ultimate value
of life.
Follow the awakened and set yourself free.
Aes dhammo sanantano...
Enough for today.
Unknown
Thursday, August 10, 2017