Osho –
Dhammapada: The Way of The Buddha (Volume 2)
Chapter 10. The
law - ancient and inexhaustible
Question 1:
Beloved Master,
Please tell us more about what you mean by
the dimension of music.
Yoga Chinmaya, life can be
lived in two ways - either as calculation or as poetry. Man has two sides to
his inner being: the calculative side that creates science, business, politics;
and the noncalculative side, which creates poetry, sculpture, music. These two
sides have not yet been bridged, they have separate existences. Because of this
man is immensely impoverished, remains unnecessarily lopsided - they have to be
bridged.
In scientific language it is
said that your brain has two hemispheres. The left-side hemisphere calculates,
is mathematical, is prose; and the right-side hemisphere of the brain is
poetry, is love, is song. One side is logic, the other side is love. One side
is syllogism, the other side is song. And they are not really bridged, hence
man lives in a kind of split.
My effort here is to bridge
these two hemispheres.
Man should be as scientific as
possible, as far as the objective world is concerned, and as musical as
possible as far as the world of relationship is concerned.
There are two worlds outside
you. One is the world of objects: the house, the money, the furniture. The
other is the world of persons: the wife, the husband, the mother, the children,
the friend. With objects be scientific; never be scientific with persons. If
you are scientific with persons you reduce them to objects, and that is one of
the greatest crimes one can commit. If you treat your wife only as an object,
as a sexual object, then you are behaving in a very ugly way. If you treat your
husband only as a financial support, as a means, then this is immoral, then
this relationship is immoral - it is prostitution, pure prostitution and
nothing else.
Don't treat persons as a means,
they are ends unto themselves. Relate to them - in love, in respect. Never
possess them and never be possessed by them. Don't be dependent on them and
don't make persons around you dependent. Don't create dependence in any way;
remain independent and let them remain independent.
This is music. This dimension I
call the dimension of music. And if you can be as scientific as possible with
objects, your life will be rich, affluent; if you can be as musical as
possible, your life will have beauty. And there is a third dimension also,
which is beyond the mind. These two belong to the mind: the scientist and the
artist. There is a third dimension, invisible - the dimension of no-mind. That
belongs to the mystic. That is available through meditation.
Hence, I say these three words
have to be remembered - three M's like three R's: mathematics, the lowest;
music, just in the middle; and meditation, the highest. A perfect human being
is scientific about objects, is aesthetic, musical, poetic about persons, and
is meditative about himself. Where all these three meet, great rejoicing
happens.
This is the real trinity, trimurti. In the East, particularly in India, we
worship a place where three rivers meet - we call it a sangham, the meeting place. And
the greatest of all of them is Preyag, where the Ganges and Jamuna and
Saraswati meet. Now, you can see the Ganges and you can see Jamuna, but
Saraswati is invisible - you cannot see it. It is a metaphor! It simply
represents, symbolically, the inner meeting of the three.
You can see mathematics, you
can see music, but you cannot see meditation. You can see the scientist, his
work is outside. You can see the artist, his work is also outside. But you
cannot see the mystic, his work is subjective. That is saraswati - the invisible river.
You can become a sacred place,
you can hallow this body and this earth; this very body the Buddha, this very
earth the Lotus Paradise. This is my slogan for the sannyasins. A sannyasin has
to be the ultimate synthesis of all that God is.
God is known only when you have
come to this synthesis; otherwise, you can believe in God, but you will not
know. And belief is just hiding your ignorance. Knowing is transforming, only
knowledge brings understanding. And knowledge is not information: knowledge is
the synthesis, integration, of all your potential.
Where the scientist and the
poet and the mystic meet and become one - when this great synthesis happens,
when all the three faces of God are expressed in you - you become a god. Then
you can declare, "Aham Brahmasmi! - I am God!" Then you can
say to the winds and the moon and to the rains and to the sun, "Ana'l Haq!
- I am the truth!" Before that, you are only a seed.
When this synthesis happens,
you have bloomed, blossomed - you have become the one-thousand-petaled lotus,
the golden lotus, the eternal lotus, that never dies: Aes Dhammo Sanantano. This is
the inexhaustible law that all the buddhas have been teaching down the ages.
Question 2:
Beloved Master,
In the west we are constantly drilled with
the aphorism: don't just stand there - do something! Yet, buddha would say:
don't just do something - stand there! The unconscious man reacts while the
wise man watches. But what about spontaneity? Is spontaneity compatible with
watching?
Buddha certainly says: Don't
just do something - stand there! But that is only the beginning of the
pilgrimage, not the end. When you have learned how to stand, when you have
learned how to be utterly silent, unmoving, undisturbed, when you know how to
just sit... sitting silently, doing nothing, the spring comes and the grass
grows by itself. But the grass grows, remember!
Action does not disappear: the
grass grows by itself. The Buddha does not become inactive; great action
happens through him, although there is no doer anymore. The doer disappears,
the doing continues. And when there is no doer, the doing IS spontaneous; it
cannot be otherwise. It is the doer that does not allow spontaneity.
The doer means the ego, the ego
means the past. When you act, you are always acting through the past, you are
acting out of experience that you have accumulated, you are acting out of the
conclusions that you have arrived at in the past. How can you be spontaneous?
The past dominates, and because of the past you cannot even see the present.
Your eyes are so full of the past, the smoke of the past is so much, that
seeing is impossible. You cannot see! You are almost completely blind - blind
because of the smoke, blind because of the past conclusions, blind because of
knowledge.
The knowledgeable man is the
most blind man in the world. Because he functions out of his knowledge, he does
not see what the case is. He simply goes on functioning mechanically. He has
learned something; it has become a ready-made mechanism in him... he acts out
of it.
There is a famous story:
There were two temples in
Japan, both enemies to each other, as temples have always been down the ages.
The priests were so antagonistic that they had stopped even looking at each
other. If they came across each other on the road, they would not look at each
other. If they came across each other on the road they stopped talking; for
centuries those two temples and their priests had not talked.
But both the priests had two
small boys - to serve them, just for running errands. Both the priests were
afraid that boys, after all, will be boys, and they might start becoming
friends to each other.
The one priest said to his boy,
"Remember, the other temple is our enemy. Never talk to the boy of the
other temple! They are dangerous people - avoid them as one avoids a disease,
as one avoids the plague. Avoid them!" The boy was always interested,
because he used to get tired of listening to great sermons - he could not
understand them.
Strange scriptures were read,
he could not understand the language. Great, ultimate problems were discussed.
There was nobody to play with, nobody even to talk with.
And when he was told,
"Don't talk to the boy of the other temple," great temptation arose
in him. That's how temptation arises.
That day he could not avoid
talking to the other boy. When he saw him on the road he asked him, "Where
are you going?"
The other boy was a little
philosophical; listening to great philosophy he had become philosophical. He
said, "Going? There is nobody who comes and goes! It is happening -
wherever the wind takes me... " He had heard the master say many times
that that's how a buddha lives, like a dead leaf: wherever the wind takes it,
it goes. So the boy said, "I am not! There is no doer. So how can I go?
What nonsense are you talking? I am a dead leaf. Wherever the wind takes me... "
The other boy was struck dumb.
He could not even answer. He could not find anything to say. He was really
embarrassed, ashamed, and felt also, "My master was right not to talk with
these people - these are dangerous people! What kind of talk is this? I had
asked a simple question: 'Where are you going?' In fact I already knew where he
was going, because we were both going to purchase vegetables in the market. A
simple answer would have done."
He went back, told his master,
"I am sorry, excuse me. You HAD prohibited me, I didn't listen to you. In
fact, because of your prohibition I was tempted. This is the first time I have
talked to those dangerous people. I just asked a simple question. 'Where are
you going?' and he started saying strange things: 'There is no going, no
coming. Who comes? Who goes? I am utter emptiness,' he was saying, 'just a dead
leaf in the wind.
And wherever the wind takes me...
'" The master said, "I told you before! Now, tomorrow stand in the
same place and when he comes ask him again, 'Where are you going?' And when he
says these things, you simply say, 'That's true. Yes, you are a dead leaf, so
am I. But when the wind is not blowing, where are you going? Then where can you
go?' Just say that, and that will embarrass him - and he has to be embarrassed,
he has to be defeated. We have been constantly quarreling, and those people
have not been able to defeat us in any debate.
So tomorrow it has to be
done!"
Early the boy got up, prepared
his answer, repeated it many times before he went. Then he stood in the place
where the boy used to cross the road, repeated again and again, prepared
himself, and then he saw the boy coming. He said, "Okay, now!"
The boy came. He asked,
"Where are you going?" And he was hoping that now the opportunity
would come...
But the boy said,
"Wherever the legs will take me... " No mention of wind! No talk of
nothingness! No question of the nondoer! Now what to do? His whole ready-made
answer looked absurd. Now to talk about the wind would be irrelevant.
Again crestfallen, now really
ashamed that he was simply stupid: "And this boy certainly knows some
strange things - now he says, 'Wherever the legs take me... '" He went
back to the master. The master said, "I have told you not to talk with
those people - they are dangerous! This is our centuries-long experience. But
now something has to be done. So tomorrow you ask again, 'Where are you going?'
and when he says, 'Wherever my legs take me,' tell him, 'If you had no legs,
then... ?' He has to be silenced one way or other!"
So the next day he asked again,
"Where are you going?" and waited.
And the boy said, "I am
going to the market to fetch vegetables."
Man ordinarily functions out of
the past, and life goes on changing. Life has no obligation to fit with your
conclusions. That's why life is very confusing - confusing to the knowledgeable
person. He has all ready-made answers: The Bhagavadgita, the holy Koran, the
Bible, the Vedas. He has everything crammed, he knows all the answers. But life
never raises the same question again; hence the knowledgeable person always
falls short.
Buddha certainly says: Know how
to sit silently. That does not mean that he says: Go on sitting silently
forever. He is not saying you have to become inactive; on the contrary, it is
only out of silence that action arises. If you are not silent, if you don't
know how to sit silently, or stand silently in deep meditation, whatsoever you
go on doing is reaction, not action. You react.
Somebody insults you, pushes a
button, and you react. You are angry, you jump on him - and you call it action?
It is not action, mind you, it is reaction. He is the manipulator and you are
the manipulated. He has pushed a button and you have functioned like a machine.
Just like you push a button and the light goes on, and you push the button and
the light goes off - that's what people are doing to you: they put you on, they
put you off.
Somebody comes and praises you
and puffs up your ego, and you feel so great; and then somebody comes and
punctures you, and you are simply flat on the ground. You are not your own
master: anybody can insult you and make you sad, angry, irritated, annoyed,
violent, mad. And anybody can praise you and make you feel at the heights, can
make you feel that you are the greatest - that Alexander the Great was nothing
compared to you.
And you act according to
others' manipulations. This is not real action.
Buddha was passing through a
village and the people came and they insulted him. And they used all the
insulting words that they could use - all the four-letter words that they knew.
Buddha stood there, listened silently, very attentively, and then said,
"Thank you for coming to me, but I am in a hurry. I have to reach the next
village, people will be waiting for me there. I cannot devote more time to you
today, but tomorrow coming back I will have more time. You can gather again,
and tomorrow if something is left which you wanted to say and have not been
able to say, you can say it to me. But today, excuse me."
Those people could not believe
their ears, their eyes: this man has remained utterly unaffected, undistracted.
One of them asked, "Have you not heard us? We have been abusing you like
anything, and you have not even answered!"
Buddha said, "If you
wanted an answer then you have come too late. You should have come ten years
ago, then I would have answered you. But for these ten years I have stopped
being manipulated by others. I am no longer a slave, I am my own master. I act
according to myself, not according to anybody else. I act according to my inner
need.
You cannot force me to do
anything. It's perfectly good:you wanted to abuse me, you abused me! Feel
fulfilled. You have done your work perfectly well. But as far as I am
concerned, I don't take your insults, and unless I take them, they are
meaningless."
When somebody insults you, you
have to become a receiver, you have to accept what he says; only then can you
react. But if you don't accept, if you simply remain detached, if you keep the
distance, if you remain cool, what can he do?
Buddha said, "Somebody can
throw a burning torch into the river. It will remain alight till it reaches the
river. The moment it falls into the river, all fire is gone - the river cools
it. I have become a river. You throw abuses at me. They are fire when you throw
them, but the moment they reach me, in my coolness, their fire is lost. They no
longer hurt.
You throw thorns - falling in
my silence they become flowers. I act out of my own intrinsic nature."
This is spontaneity. The man of
awareness, understanding, acts. The man who is unaware, unconscious,
mechanical, robotlike, reacts.
Curtis, you ask me, "The
unconscious man reacts while the wise man watches." It is not that he
simply watches - watching is one aspect of his being. He does not act without
watching. But don't misunderstand the Buddha. The buddhas have always been
misunderstood; you are not the first to misunderstand. This whole country has
been misunderstanding the Buddha; hence the whole country has become inactive.
Thinking that all the great masters say: Sit silently, the country has become
lazy, lousy; the country has lost energy, vitality, life. It has become utterly
dull, unintelligent, because intelligence becomes sharpened only when you act.
And when you act moment to
moment out of your awareness and watchfulness, great intelligence arises. You
start shining, glowing, you become luminous. But it happens through two things:
watching, and action out of that watching. If watching becomes inaction, you
are committing suicide. Watching should lead you into action, a new kind of
action; a new quality is brought to action.
You watch, you are utterly
quiet and silent. You see what the situation is, and out of that seeing you
respond. The man of awareness responds, he is responsible - literally!
He is responsive, he does not
react. His action is born out of his awareness, not out of your manipulation;
that is the difference. Hence, there is no question of there being any
incompatibility between watching and spontaneity. Watching is the beginning of
spontaneity; spontaneity is the fulfillment of watching.
The real man of understanding
acts - acts tremendously, acts totally, but he acts in the moment, out of his
consciousness. He is like a mirror. The ordinary man, the unconscious man, is
not like a mirror, he is like a photoplate. What is the difference between a
mirror and a photoplate? A photoplate, once exposed, becomes useless. It
receives the impression, becomes impressed by it - it carries the picture. But
remember, the picture is not reality - the reality goes on growing. You can go
into the garden and you can take a picture of a rosebush. Tomorrow the picture
will be the same, the day after tomorrow the picture will also be the same. Go
again and see the rosebush: it is no longer the same. The roses have gone, or
new roses have arrived. A thousand and one things have happened.
It is said that once a realist
philosopher went to see the famous painter, Picasso. The philosopher believed
in realism and he had come to criticize Picasso because Picasso's paintings are
abstract, they are not realistic. They don't depict reality as it is. On the
contrary, they are symbolic, have a totally different dimension - they are
symbolistic.
The realist said, "I don't
like your paintings. A painting should be real! If you paint my wife, then your
painting should look like my wife." And he took out a picture of his wife
and said, "Look at this picture! The painting should be like this."
Picasso looked at the picture
and said, "This is your wife?"
He said, "Yes, this is my
wife!"
Picasso said, "I am
surprised! She is very small and flat."
The picture cannot be the wife!
Another story is told:
A beautiful woman came to
Picasso and said, "Just the other day I saw your self-portrait in a
friend's home. It was so beautiful, I was so influenced, almost hypnotized,
that I hugged the picture and kissed it."
Picasso said, "Really! And
then what did the picture do to you? Did the picture kiss you back?"
The woman said, "Are you
mad?! The picture did not kiss me back."
Picasso said, "Then it was
not me."
A picture is a dead thing. The
camera, the photoplate, catches only a static phenomenon. And life is never
static, it goes on changing. Your mind functions like a camera, it goes on
collecting pictures - it is an album. And then out of those pictures you go on
reacting. Hence, you are never true to life, because whatsoever you do is
wrong; whatsoever you do, I say, is wrong. It never fits.
A woman was showing the family
album to her child, and they came across a picture of a beautiful man: long
hair, beard, very young, very alive.
The boy asked, "Mummy, who
is this man?"
And the woman said, "Can't
you recognize him? He is your daddy!"
The boy looked puzzled and
said, "If he is my daddy, then who is that bald man who lives with
us?"
A picture is static. It remains
as it is, it never changes. The unconscious mind functions like a camera, it functions
like a photoplate. The watchful mind, the meditative mind, functions like a
mirror. It catches no impression; it remains utterly empty, always empty. So
whatsoever comes in front of the mirror, it is reflected. If you are standing
before the mirror, it reflects you. If you are gone, don't say that the mirror
betrays you.
The mirror is simply a mirror.
When you are gone, it no longer reflects you; it has no obligation to reflect
you anymore. Now somebody else is facing it - it reflects somebody else. If
nobody is there, it reflects nothing. It is always true to life.
The photoplate is never true to
life. Even if your photo is taken right now, by the time the photographer has
taken it out of the camera, you are no longer the same! Much water has already
gone down the Ganges. You have grown, changed, you have become older. Maybe
only one minute has passed, but one minute can be a great thing - you may be
dead! Just one minute before you were alive; after one minute, you may be dead.
The picture will never die.
But in the mirror, if you are
alive, you are alive; if you are dead, you are dead.
Buddha says: Learn sitting
silently - become a mirror. Silence makes a mirror out of your consciousness,
and then you function moment to moment. You reflect life. You don't carry an
album within your head. Then your eyes are clear and innocent, you have
clarity, you have vision, and you are never untrue to life.
This is authentic living.
Question 3:
Beloved Master,
Why is it that nobody likes to be
criticized, and yet everybody loves to criticize others?
Gayatri, the ego is very
sensitive and very fragile, and is very afraid of criticism. The ego depends on
others' opinions. It has no reality of its own. It is not a real entity, it is
not substantial - it is just a collection of others' opinions.
Somebody says, "You are
beautiful," and you collect it. Somebody says, "You are
intelligent," and you collect it. And somebody says, "I have never
come across such a unique person," and you collect it. And then one day a
person comes and he says, "You are repulsive!" Now how can you accept
criticism? It goes against the image that you have been creating of yourself.
You will retaliate, you will fight tooth and nail. But whatsoever you do, the
mind has taken the impression of this opinion too. Then somebody says,
"You are ugly," and somebody says, "You are stupid." And
there are millions of people in the world and they all have their own opinions,
likes and dislikes.
Hence, your ego becomes a
hodge-podge thing, a very contradictory phenomenon. One fragment says,
"You are beautiful!" another fragment says, "Nonsense, you are
ugly!"
One fragment says, "You
are intelligent," another fragment says, "Keep quiet! Shut your big
mouth! You are just plain stupid and nothing else!" Hence people live in a
confused state. They don't know who they are, whether they are intelligent or
stupid, beautiful or ugly, good or bad, saint or sinner - because one person
may call you a saint, another person may call you a sinner. There are different
values and different criteria in the world, there are different moralities in
the world.
Your neighbor may be a
Christian and you may be a Jaina. Now the Christian has no problem with
drinking wine; in fact, Christ himself loved to drink wine. But the Jaina
cannot conceive, even in his dreams, of Mahavira drinking wine. That's
impossible, the very idea is inconceivable. But to the Christian the greatest
miracle that Jesus did was to turn water into wine. If Mahavira had been around,
he would have done just the opposite miracle immediately! He would have turned
the wine again into water.
Now, if you drink wine once in
a while, are you a saint or a sinner? Different people will say different
things. In Mahatma Gandhi's ashram tea was prohibited; what to say about wine!
Tea, poor tea, innocent tea was prohibited! And all the Buddhist monks down the
ages have been drinking tea. In fact they think that it helps meditation, and
there may be a grain of truth in it, because it keeps you awake. And the
Buddhist meditation is such that you tend to doze off: sitting for hours in a
single posture... Just try it. After ten
minutes you will start dreaming. After one hour it is impossible to keep awake.
Tea may have helped. In fact,
tea was discovered by Buddhists. One of the greatest Buddhist masters,
Bodhidharma, discovered tea. The name comes from a monastery, Ta, in which
Bodhidharma used to live in China. That monastery was on top of the hill, Ta.
In China 'ta' can be pronounced in two ways: either it can be pronounced as
'ta' or as 'cha' - hence the Hindi Chai, the Marathi Cha, and the English 'tea'.
Bodhidharma, the great founder of Zen, discovered it.
And wine has been made in
Catholic monasteries down the ages. You will be surprised to know that the best
wine has been made by Catholic monks and nuns. The oldest wine is available
only in the cellars of ancient monasteries in Europe, the oldest and the best.
Wine, made in monasteries? What kind of monasteries are these? Who is going to
decide?
In fact, again there is a grain
of truth in it. Buddhist meditation means watchfulness, and tea has some
chemicals in it which help watchfulness - it has a stimulant. Now some day it
is possible that another Bodhidharma will come and say, "Smoking is good,"
because tobacco also has a stimulant - nicotine. Smoking can also help
meditation if tea can help it. Smoking is still waiting for its Bodhidharma to
appear.
Then you will be more able to
smoke and feel very virtuous: the more you smoke, the more saintly you will be!
It is not accidental that wine
became part of the monastery's creativity. Jesus says: To be drowned in God is
prayer. Jesus' path is that of love, Buddha's path is that of meditation;
hence, Buddha will never agree to wine, but to tea he may agree. Jesus agrees
to wine because wine gives you a taste of being utterly lost, of being drowned,
of getting out of the ego, of forgetting the ego and all its worries. It gives
you a taste, a glimpse of the unknown.
But who is going to decide about
who is right and who is wrong? All these things are there in the atmosphere,
and you catch them. Out of these things you make some kind of image; it is
bound to remain hodge-podge, it can't be clear-cut. Hence you are very much
afraid of somebody criticizing you because he brings your hodge-podgeness to
the surface. It is not his criticism that you are against; you are against the
fact that he brings problems to the surface which you are somehow repressing
within yourself. He makes you aware of the problems, and nobody wants to be
aware of the problems, because problems then want to be solved, and it is a
complex and arduous affair. It needs guts to solve problems. You may not like
to solve problems in fact, because you may have some investment in your problems
- you MUST have, because you have lived with them for so long that you must
have invested in them. You may not like to change your life-style. If you are
miserable you may like to remain miserable - whatsoever you say on the surface,
that's another matter. Notwithstanding what you say, deep down you may still
like to remain miserable.
For example, a wife knows that
the husband is loving towards her only when she is ill.
Whenever she is healthy he
simply forgets all about her, he never takes any care when she is healthy. When
she is ill, out of sheer duty, responsibility, he comes, sits by her side, puts
his hand on her head; otherwise he does not give her even a look. Ask husbands,
"How long has it been since you have seen your wife's face, face-to-face?"
You may be able to recognize
your dog if it is lost, but if your wife is lost you will have to ask the
neighbors because they will recognize her better - just as you will recognize
the neighbor's wife better. Who looks at his own wife?
Mulla Nasruddin had gone to see
a play. A man was in such great love in the play, he was acting so romantically
that Nasruddin said to his wife, "This man is a great actor."
The wife said, "And do you
know? - the woman he's acting with is really his wife in actual life."
Nasruddin said, "Then he
is the greatest actor in the world!"
To show so much romance to
one's own wife... it is next to impossible.
I was traveling for twenty
years in this country. I was staying in thousands of homes, and I saw it
continuously: when the husband is not in the house, the wife seems to be very
cheerful, very happy. The moment the husband enters the house she has a
headache, and she lies down on the bed. And I was watching, because I was just
staying in the house. Just a moment before, everything was okay - as if the
husband has not entered but a headache has entered.
Slowly slowly, I understood the
logic. There is a great investment in it. And remember, I am not saying that
she is simply pretending. If you pretend too long it can become a reality, it
can become an autohypnosis. I'm not saying that she is NOT suffering from a
headache, remember. She may be suffering: just the face of the husband is
enough to trigger the process! It has happened so many times that now it has
become an automatic process. So I am not saying that she is deceiving the
husband; she is deceived by her own investments.
You have a certain image and
you don't want it to be changed, and criticism means again a disturbance.
You surely know the story of
Little Red Riding Hood:
This little girl had gone to
see her grandmother who lived in the woods. The bad wolf, who wanted to eat her
up, took the grandma's place in the bed after having devoured her in one gulp.
So he was under the blankets with grandma's nightie and nightcap on.
When Little Red Riding Hood
arrived, she noticed something different, and looking the grandmother in the
eye, she asked:
"But, granny, what big
eyes you have!"
"It is to see you better,
my dear."
"But granny, what a big
nose you have!"
"It is to smell you
better, my dear."
"But granny, what big arms
you have!"
"It is to hug you better,
my dear."
"But granny, what hairy
hands you have!"
"Hey! Have you come around
just to criticize?"
There is a limit. Beyond that
nobody likes to be criticized. But the other side of the story is that
everybody likes to criticize others; that gives you a good feeling. If others
are bad, vicariously it helps you to feel good. If everybody is a cheat, a
hypocrite, dishonest, cunning, it gives you a good feeling: you are not that
bad, you are not that dishonest. The comparison relaxes you. It helps you to
remain dishonest, because people are more dishonest than you are. In this
dishonest world how can you survive?
You have to play the game.
Every morning, early in the
morning when you read the newspapers, it always gives you a good feeling - so
much happening all over the world, so many ugly things, so much violence,
murder, suicide, rape, robbery, that compared to all this you are a saint.
Hence people don't like to read
the Bible in the morning, or the Gita, but the newspaper! Reading the Gita you
feel like a sinner, reading the Bible you start feeling a trembling, that hell
is bound to happen to you, that you are on the way. And the scriptures depict hell
so vividly, with such color that it can make anybody afraid. And one thing
seems to be certain: that you cannot reach heaven. It seems to be impossible,
it demands impossibilities.
Nobody likes to read the
scriptures, nobody likes to listen to the scriptures. That's why if you go to
the temple you will find almost everybody fast asleep. There are physicians I
know who send people to religious discourses if they suffer from insomnia. If
no tranquilizer works, don't be worried: go to a religious discourse. It is the
ultimate in tranquilizers - up to now nothing has been able to defeat it.
Listening to religious scriptures one starts falling asleep. It is a
protection, it is to avoid; otherwise, it becomes absolutely certain that
heaven is not for you, you are meant for hell. And it stirs your heart, raises
great fear, and there seems to be no way to escape from it.
Hence, everybody likes to
criticize, and not only to criticize - everybody likes to magnify others'
faults. You try to make others' faults as big as possible because then, in
comparison, your faults are negligible. And God is compassionate: Rahim, Rehman!
God is compassion! You have
only small faults, and looking at the world where so many sinners exist...
When the Day of Judgment comes
you can be perfectly certain that your number is not going to be called, you
will not be called. The queue will be too long, and it has to be decided within
twenty-four hours. One Day of Judgment, and millions and millions of people -
Tamerlane and Genghis Khan and Alexander the Great and Adolf Hitler and
Mussolini and Joseph Stalin and Mao Zedong... these will be the people standing
in front. You will be the last in the queue. Your number is not going to come.
You can be certain of it if you look at people with a magnifying glass.
After running into a wild crowd
at a basketball game one evening, the referee picked up his wife and told her
it might be better if she stayed away from the remaining games to which he was
assigned. "After all," he said, "it must have been pretty
embarrassing to you when everyone stood up and booed me."
"It was not so bad,"
she replied. "I stood up and booed too."
Ego does not want to be
criticized AND wants to criticize everybody. Become aware of the strategy of
the ego, how it nourishes itself, how it protects itself. Unless you become
absolutely aware of all the cunning devices of the ego, you will never be able
to get rid of it. And to get rid of it is the beginning of a religious life, is
the beginning of sannyas.
Then you are no longer worried
what others say about you.
Just look at me... The whole world goes on saying things about
me. I don't even read them. Every day Laxmi brings hundreds of reports
appearing in different languages from different countries. Who cares? If they
are enjoying rumors, let them enjoy; they don't have anything else to enjoy in
their lives. Let them have a little fun. Nothing is wrong in it, they cannot
harm me. They can destroy my body, but they cannot harm ME. And I have no image
of my own; they cannot destroy that either. And I don't react, I act. My action
springs out of my self, it is not to be manipulated by others. I am a free man,
freedom. I act of my own accord.
Learn the art of acting of your
own accord. Don't be worried about criticisms and don't be interested in
praises. If you are interested in being praised by others, then you cannot be
unconcerned about criticism. Remain aloof. Praise or criticism, it is all
alike. Success or failure, it is all alike. AES DHAMMO SANANTANO.
Question 4:
Beloved Master,
Although i want to surrender myself to you
and take sannyas, i feel helpless to do so. Why is it so? Please clarify this.
S.D. Prasad, it is very simple,
there is nothing to clarify. You are afraid of people, you are afraid of the
society. You are afraid of the established church, the established religion,
the priests, the politicians - you are simply afraid. It is fear that is
preventing you. Sannyas needs courage, sannyas needs guts, particularly my
sannyas.
The old sannyas no longer needs
guts, because it is already part of the status quo. It is accepted, respected.
If you become an old-style sannyasin people will worship you. If you become MY
sannyasin you will be in constant danger. People will think you are mad, people
will think you are hypnotized. People will think that something has gone wrong
- that you have gone nuts. People will say, "Such a good man! We had never
ever thought, dreamed that this was going to happen to you."
People will laugh, rumor about
you, gossip about you, will create a thousand and one kinds of troubles for
you. And you have to exist with people, you have to live with them. On each
step they will create barriers and they will put rocks in your path. And not
only those who are part of the greater society, but even those who are very
close: your wife may create so much trouble for you... your children, your
parents. From every nook and corner you will have to face difficulties.
You are afraid. Just try to
understand your fear, and then it is very easy. Once you see that it is fear,
drop it. In spite of all fears, jump into sannyas, because to remain in fear is
to become a coward, to remain in fear is to miss the whole joy of life. Life
belongs to those who know how to risk. Life belongs to the adventurous, and
sannyas is the greatest adventure there is. And because I am bringing a totally
new concept of sannyas into the world - a sannyas that is not escapist, a
sannyas that does not believe in renunciation, a sannyas that believes in rejoicing,
a sannyas that wants to live in the world and yet not be of it...
The old sannyas is easy: you
escape from the world, you leave the opportunities where temptation is
possible, you escape to the Himalayan caves. Sitting there you will be a saint,
because you don't have any other opportunity. You have to be a saint. What else
can you do there?
In the world all kinds of
temptations exist. To be a saint in the world is something superb, something
extraordinary. If there is no woman in the Himalayan caves... and I don't think
there is. Women have never been so foolish; they are more earthly, they are
more intuitive, they are not intellectuals. They are very realistic, they don't
go after words and theories and philosophies. It is man who becomes very much
attracted by abstractions. Woman does not bother much about the other world,
she wants a beautiful sari herenow! You are a fool if you are waiting for some
beautiful woman in heaven.
The feminine mind does not
bother much about the other world. The feminine mind says, "We will see.
If we can manage here, we will manage there too. If we can find a fool here,
the same fools will be available there too. So why be worried about the other
world?"
But man lives in abstractions.
That is the masculine mind's greatest flaw. It lives in theories. It becomes so
much hypnotized by words that it is ready to sacrifice life itself.
It is ready to go to the caves,
to renounce this life in order to attain the other life. It lives in the past,
it lives in the future. Woman lives more in the present. Hence, there have been
no women in the Himalayan caves. You can go and sit there and dream all kinds
of dreams, but no opportunity is there. Money is not there, power is not there,
beauty is not there - nothing is there! Sitting in your cave you become more
and more dull, slowly slowly; it is a kind of gradual suicide.
My sannyas is not dropping out
of the world but getting deeper into it, getting to the very core of it,
because God is at the very core of the world. God is the soul of the world. You
cannot find him by escaping from the world. You can find him only by going
deeper and deeper into the world. When you reach the very center of existence,
you will find him. He is hidden in the world, the whole world is permeated by
him. He is in the trees and in the rocks and in the birds and in the people.
Yes, he is in your wife, in your husband and in your children. He is in you!
And the best possibility to find him is in the world, not out of the world.
To go out of the world has been
a great attraction; that too because of fear. The escapist is a coward; he
cannot be watchful enough to live in the world and yet be unaffected by it. He
cannot be so watchful - he does not have that much intelligence, he cannot make
that great effort to be awake - hence he escapes. He is a coward.
So the old sannyas, S.D.
Prasad, may fit you perfectly, but it is not going to help. You will remain a
coward, and you will remain fear-oriented. On the surface it appears that the
sannyasin who is leaving the world is very brave. It is not so. Don't be
deceived by the appearances. The soldier who is going to war looks so brave -
don't be deceived by the appearances - deep down he is trembling, he's afraid.
Adolf Hitler was preparing his
wardrobe for a second dismal winter on the frozen front in Russia.
"Mein Fuhrer,"
suggested one of his suite, "remember what Napoleon did when he was in
Russia. He wore a bright red uniform so that in case he was wounded his men
would not notice the fact that he was bleeding."
"Excellent idea! Excellent
idea!" ruminated Adolf. "Just throw me my brown pants."
Don't be deceived by the
appearances. Even people like Adolf Hitler are tremendously afraid, trembling.
And your so-called sannyasins who have escaped from the world have escaped out
of fear.
I teach you the way of
fearlessness. It is simply fear and nothing else that is preventing you,
although you will not feel very happy with my answer. You must have been
expecting that I would say something very gratifying to your ego. Excuse me, I
cannot speak any untruth. I can only speak the true, and if it hurts, it hurts.
It is only through truth that light starts entering into your being. So if you
feel wounded... because your name seems unfamiliar to me, you must be new. And
with new people I am never so rude, but I see a possibility in you, hence I am
so hard.
Whenever I see a possibility in
a man, I become hard. Whenever I see no possibility I remain very polite. If I
am polite, that simply means I want to get rid of you. If I am hard, if I
hammer hard on your head, that means I have already started respecting you.
Question 5:
Beloved Master,
I am very greedy for money. Do you think i
have been a jew in my past life?
Suresh, why in a past life? You
are a Jew right now! Just by being born in India, just by being born in a Hindu
family, does not make any difference. 'Jew' does not mean a race, it is a
psychology, it is a metaphysics. The marwari is a Jew - the Indian Jew. In fact,
anybody who is greedy is Jewish - greed is Jewish.
Jesus is not a Jew although he
was born a Jew - he is not Jewish at all. When I use words like 'jew', remember
always that I'm not talking about races. I'm not interested in blood. The
Jewish blood and the Christian blood and the Hindu blood are all alike. You can
take a few samples - you can get all kinds of samples here - you can take a few
samples to the doctor and ask him which blood is Jewish and which blood is
Hindu and which blood is Buddhist, and he will be at a loss. He cannot find any
way to figure it out - blood is blood! Of course there are types in blood, but
they are not Jewish and Hindu and Buddhist. 'Jew' is nothing but another name
for greed. In that sense the whole world consists of Jews, except for a few exceptional
people. Almost everybody is a Jew! Either you are a Jesus or you are a Jew -
these are the only alternatives. If you don't want to be a Jew then be a Jesus.
And don't try to console yourself that in a past life... Those are tricky inventions of the human mind:
"In the past life maybe I was a Jew." You are a Jew right now.
Throwing the responsibility on the past life keeps you intact; then you can
continue as you are.
An old Jew offers to pay a
prostitute double her demanded fee if she will keep both hands on his head
during love-making. Afterwards she asks him what special thrill he got out of
this.
"No thrill," he says,
taking a large roll of bills out of his pocket, "but for two bucks extra I
know your hands are on my head and not in my pockets!"
Another story for you, Suresh:
A retired Jewish businessman is
nearly ruined by his sons' demands for money to pay off the girls whom they
have seduced and made pregnant. But he pays in order to keep from seeing the
family name disgraced.
A few days later his daughter
comes to him and confesses, "Papa, I am pregnant."
"Thank God, business is
picking up," says the old man.
And the third story:
A room full of Jews are
discussing which business is best. Finally one bearded old man says, "Let
us stop lying to each other. The whorehouse business is the best: they got it,
they sell it, they still got it."
"What are you
saying?" cries another horrified old man.
What am I saying? I'm saying:
no overhead, no upkeep, no inventory - who can beat it?
And yes, it is all
wholesale."
Greed is Jewish, and everybody
is a Jew in that sense. And remember that greed is a projection of fear. It is
because of fear that man becomes greedy. He is so much afraid, that he wants to
accumulate for the future. He is so afraid, that he sacrifices his today for
tomorrow, and the tomorrow never comes. The greedy man is the most foolish man
in the world. "The fool" Buddha calls him - the fool par excellence,
because he goes on sacrificing the present for the future which never comes. He
accumulates money but he cannot use it; he remains poor.
The greedy man never becomes
rich. He may have the whole world at his disposal, but he remains poor. He
cannot enjoy it, his greed won't allow that. He remains miserly. He always
remains in such fear of the future that he cannot part from his money. He
accumulates, accumulates, wastes his whole life and one day dies. He was a poor
man his whole life - empty-handed he had come, empty-handed he has gone, and
his whole life went down the drain with no significance.
Don't try to console yourself
that in the past life you were a Jew. Look into your being!
You are a Jew. And then there
is a possibility that you will see it: "I am a Jew, I am greedy. From
where is my greed coming?" Go deeper into greed, analyze greed and you
will find fear. And when you find fear you have come to a very fundamental
thing.
There are only two ways to live
life: one is that of fear and the other is that of love. The man who lives out
of fear becomes greedy, becomes aggressive, becomes violent, becomes egoistic.
And the man who lives out of love is out of necessity nongreedy, because love
knows how to share. Love enjoys sharing, love knows no greater joy than
sharing. Whatsoever love has, love shares. And love comes to know a great
secret: that the more you share, the more love energy goes on reaching you,
welling up from some unknown, inexhaustible source - Aes Dhammo Sanantano.
The more you love, the more you
are prayerful. The more you love, the more God gives you, because you are
giving. Whatsoever you do to people, God goes on doing to you.
If you are miserly, God becomes
miserly towards you. If you are sharing, God is sharing. Existence is only a
mirror, it reflects your face, it echoes your being. Live through love and you
will be a Jesus.
Jesus says: God is love. Live
through fear and you are a Jew. You may be a Hindu Jew or a Mohammedan Jew or a
Christian Jew - it doesn't matter. Adjectives don't matter.
Question
6:
Beloved Master,
Why don't I understand you?
Ram Gopal, understanding is a
second step. The first is hearing. You don't hear me. You miss the first step;
then the second is not possible.
While you are listening to me,
a thousand and one thoughts are roaming in your mind.
They keep you deaf. My words
never reach you intact, in their purity. They are distorted, they are colored
by your thoughts, by your prejudices, by your already arrived at conclusions.
You listen to me through your knowledge - that's why you really DON'T listen.
And whatsoever reaches you is something totally different than what was
conveyed. I'm saying one thing, you go on hearing something else; hence the
misunderstanding. That's why you don't understand me; otherwise, I am using
very simple words.
I'm not using any intellectual
jargon, I'm using the day-to-day language. I never use big words - my words are
simple, as simple as they can be. If you don't understand, that simply means
that somehow you are inwardly deaf. A great clamor of words and thoughts and conclusions
and theories and prejudices and knowledge and experience - the Hindu, the
Mohammedan, the Christian, the Jew - they are all there inside. It is very
difficult for me to find a way to you. It is almost impossible to reach you.
It is not a question of
understanding. Understanding will flower of its own accord if you can do one
thing: if you can listen, if you can allow me to reach you, if you can open
your heart, if you are not deaf - then understanding is bound to happen. Truth
heard is understood, is bound to be understood. Understanding needs no other
effort, it simply needs an opening, a vulnerability. Just open a window to me,
just a window will do, and I can steal into you. Just a window will do. If you
cannot open the front door, don't be worried, the back door will do. But open
some door to me, let me come in, and then it is impossible not to understand,
it is impossible to misunderstand.
Truth has such clarity that
once understood, it transforms your life. Once heard, it is understood. Truth
has a very simple process: once heard, it is understood; once understood, it
transforms your life. If rightly heard you never ask how to understand. If
rightly understood you never ask, "Now what should I do to transform my
life according to it?" Truth transforms, truth liberates.
Meditate over this small
anecdote:
A man walked into a New York
bar and ordered two whiskies, one for himself and one for his friend. The
barman produced the whiskies and the man poured some whisky into a thimble
which he placed on a perfect miniature grand piano, which he took from his
briefcase. He also took from his briefcase a twelve-inch-high man in evening
dress, who sat down in front of the piano and commenced playing "The
Moonlight Sonata."
The barman was incredulous and
demanded to know where the little man has come from. The man explained, "I
was just looking through a junk shop when I found an old oil lamp. I rubbed it
with my sleeve a little in order to examine it better when there was a flash
and a genie appeared saying he was the slave of the lamp and any wish of mine
was his task to fulfill. So I told him I wanted a twelve-inch penis, and this
is what the deaf sonofabitch gave me!"
He heard "a pianist"
and missed the whole point.
You go on hearing what you can hear.
You go on hearing things which are not said at all. And then you interpret them
and all interpretations are misinterpretations. And whatsoever you will do will
feel frustrating, because your misinterpretations cannot bring you to truth.
Truth is a communion.
Buddha says: Find a friend,
find a master and be in communion with the master. What is communion? Communion
means withdrawing all conditions, withdrawing all prejudices, becoming innocent
with somebody who has arrived, becoming a child again in front of one who has
become awakened. Listen like a small child: alert, full of awe, wonder, and
your heart will immediately be penetrated. I will reach you like an arrow.
Yes, there will be a little
pain too, but very sweet... so sweet that you have never known anything more
sweet than that. Yes, when for the first time the truth penetrates your heart
like an arrow, it kills you - it kills you as an ego. It is a crucifixion, but
immediately there is a resurrection. On the one hand you die as you have been up
to now, on the other hand you are born again. You become a twice-born, a DWIJ;
you become a brahmin, you become one who knows.
But knowing needs a great love
affair between the disciple and the master. Knowing is possible only when the
love affair is total, when the commitment is total, when the involvement is
total. If you listen just like a spectator, you will go on missing. If you
listen only out of curiosity, you will go on missing. If you listen with all
your ideas and philosophies, you will hear something else which has not been
said.
It is not a question of
understanding my words, it is a question of understanding my presence. Only the
disciple is blessed.
Ram Gopal, you are still not a
disciple. You are curious. You have come to see what is happening. You are not
yet committed. You listen to me, but you keep a distance, so that if things
become too much you can escape easily. You remain on the periphery, you have
not entered into the circle.
Enter the circle - I give you
the invitation. Become my guest, let me be your host. Drink out of me and you
will be drowned, and you will be transformed. It is a promise.
Enough for today.
Unknown
Thursday, August 10, 2017