osho samadhi समाधिः

messages from all enlightened masters

ch7 : The Dhammapada: The Way of the Buddha, Vol 3

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'And in no-mind you will know the ultimate truth, DHAMMA.
And moving from mind to no-mind is the step, PADA. 
And this is the whole secret of THE DHAMMAPADA.'
 
 
 
ch7 : The Dhammapada: The Way of the Buddha, Vol 3
 
chapter 7
He is the charioteer
 
18 August 1979 am in Buddha Hall
 
 
 
HE IS THE CHARIOTEER.
HE HAS TAMED HIS HORSES, 
PRIDE AND THE SENSES.
EVEN THE GODS ADMIRE HIM.
 
YIELDING LIKE THE EARTH,
JOYOUS AND CLEAR LIKE THE LAKE, 
STILL AS THE STONE AT THE DOOR, 
HE IS FREE FROM LIFE AND DEATH.
 
HIS THOUGHTS ARE STILL.
HIS WORDS ARE STILL.
HIS WORK IS STILLNESS.
HE SEES HIS FREEDOM AND IS FREED.
 
THE MASTER SURRENDERS HIS BELIEFS.
HE SEES BEYOND THE END AND THE BEGINNING.
 
HE CUTS ALL TIES.
HE GIVES UP ALL HIS DESIRES. 
HE RESISTS ALL TEMPTATION. 
AND HE RISES.
 
AND WHEREVER HE LIVES,
IN THE CITY OR THE COUNTRY, 
IN THE VALLEY OR IN THE HILLS, 
THERE IS GREAT JOY.
 
EVEN IN THE EMPTY FOREST HE FINDS JOY
BECAUSE HE WANTS NOTHING.
 
 
 
Man is a seed of great potential: 
man is the seed of buddhahood. 
 
Each man is born to be a buddha. 
 
Man is not born to be a slave 
but to be a master. 
 
But there are very few who actualize their potential. 
 
And the reason why millions can't realize their potential is that 
they take it for granted that they already have it.
 
 
 
Life is only an opportunity to grow, to be, to bloom. 
 
 
 
Life in itself is empty; 
unless you are creative you will not be able to fill it with fulfillment. 
 
 
 
You have a song in your heart to be sung 
and you have a dance to be danced, 
but the dance is invisible, and the song
-- even you have not heard it yet. 
 
It is deep down hidden in the innermost core of your being; 
 
it has to be brought to the surface
it has to be expressed.
 
That's what is meant by 'self-actualization'. 
 
 
 
Rare is the person who transforms his life into a growth
who transforms his life into a long journey of self-actualization, 
who becomes what he was meant to be. 
 
 
 
In the East we have called that man the buddha, 
in the West we have called that man the christ. 
 
The word 'christ' exactly means what the word 'buddha' means: 
one who has come home.
 
 
 
We are all wanderers in search of the home, 
but the search is very unconscious 
-- groping in the dark, 
not exactly aware what we are groping for, 
who we are, 
where we are going. 
 
We go on like driftwood, 
we go on remaining accidental.
 
And it becomes possible 
because millions of people around you are in the same boat
and when you see that millions are doing the same things that you are doing, 
then you must be right 
-- because millions can't be wrong. 
 
That is your logic, 
and that logic is fundamentally erroneous: 
millions can't be right.
 
 
 
It is very rare that a person is right; 
it is very rare that a person realizes the truth. 
 
 
 
Millions live lives of lies, lives of pretension. 
 
Their existences are only superficial; 
they live on the circumference, 
utterly unaware of the center. 
 
And the center contains all: 
the center is the kingdom of God.
 
 
 
The first step towards buddhahood, 
towards the realization of your infinite potential, 
is to recognize that up to now you have been wasting your life, 
that up to now you have remained utterly unconscious.
 
Start becoming conscious; 
that is the only way to arrive. 
 
It is arduous, it is hard. 
 
 
 
To remain accidental is easy; 
it needs no intelligence, hence it is easy. 
 
Any idiot can do it
-- all the idiots are already doing it. 
 
It is easy to be accidental 
because you never feel responsible for anything that happens. 
 
You can always throw the responsibility onto something else: 
fate
God, 
society, 
economic structure, 
the state, 
the church, 
the mother, 
the father, 
the parents.... 
You can go on throwing the responsibility onto somebody else; 
hence it is easy.
 
 
 
To be conscious means to take the whole responsibility on your own shoulders. 
 
To be responsible is the beginning of buddhahood.
 
 
 
When I use the word 'responsible' 
I am not using it in the ordinary connotation of being dutiful. 
 
I am using it in its real, essential meaning: 
the capacity to respond 
-- that's my meaning. 
 
And the capacity to respond is possible only if you are conscious. 
 
If you are fast asleep, how can you respond? 
 
If you are asleep, 
the birds will go on singing 
but you will not hear, 
and the flowers will go on blooming 
and you will never be able to sense the beauty, the fragrance, the joy, that they are showering on existence.
 
To be responsible means to be alert, conscious. 
 
To be responsible means to be mindful. 
 
 
 
Act with as much awareness as you can find possible. 
 
Even small things 
-- walking on the street, 
eating your food, 
taking your bath -- 
should not be done mechanically. 
 
Do them with full awareness.
 
 
 
Slowly slowly, small acts become luminous, 
and by and by those luminous acts go on gathering inside you, 
and finally the explosion. 
 
The seed has exploded, 
the potential has become actual. 
 
You are no longer a seed 
but a lotus flower, 
a golden lotus flower, 
a one-thousand-petaled lotus flower. 
 
And that is the moment of great benediction; 
Buddha calls it nirvana
 
One has arrived. 
 
Now there is no more to achieve, 
nowhere to go. 
 
You can rest, 
you can relax 
-- the journey is over. 
 
Tremendous joy arises in that moment, great ecstasy is born.
 
But one has to begin from the beginning.
 
 
 
After a three-day drinking bout, 
Tooley and Bragan registered at a hotel and asked for twin beds. 
 
However, in the darkness they both got into the same bed.
 
"Hey!" 
 
yelled Tooley. 
 
"I think a homo has crept in bed with me."
 
"There's a queer in my bed, too," 
 
called Bragan.
 
"Let's throw the fairies out," 
 
called back the first.
 
A terrific wrestling match ensued 
and finally Tooley went sailing out of the bed. 
 
"How did you make out?" 
 
he called from the floor.
 
"I threw my guy out," 
 
said the other Irishman. 
 
"How about you?"
 
"He threw me out."
 
"Well, that makes us even. Get into bed with me."
 
 
 
This is how man is: 
in darkness, utterly unconscious; 
doing things, not knowing why; 
simply doing 
because there is an unconscious urge to do. 
 
Now, this is not only a mystic hypothesis about man. 
 
Sigmund Freud
Gustav Jung, 
Alfred Adler 
and others, 
the modern researchers into the psyche of man, 
have also come across the same fact.
 
Freud says man lives unconsciously, 
although the mind is so cunning that it can find reasons, motives. 
 
At least it can create a facade as if you are living a conscious life 
-- and that is very dangerous 
because you can start believing in your own facade. 
 
Then your life is gone, 
then you will not be able to use this tremendously valuable opportunity. 
 
People go on doing unconscious things 
-- although they suffer, 
although they are immensely miserable, 
still they go on doing the same things which bring misery to them. 
 
They don't know what else to do.
 
They are not there, 
they are not present; 
hence they can't do anything. 
 
They are trapped in the unconscious instincts.
 
 
 
Hennessy, loaded to the gills, was lurking on a dark and deserted street corner. 
Soon a man came walking by, 
and Hennessy sprang out of the shadows, a gun in his hand. 
 
"Stay where you are!" 
 
he slobbered. 
 
Then he pulled a bottle out of his pocket. 
 
"Here," 
 
Hennessy ordered, 
 
"take a drink of this."
 
Too terrified to resist, 
the poor schnook took the bottle and drank deeply. 
 
"Wow!" 
 
he exclaimed. 
 
"That stuff tastes awful!"
 
"I know," 
 
gurgled the crocked Irishman.
 
"Now you hold the gun and force me to drink some."
 
 
 
The stuff that you are drinking, 
that stuff that you call your life, 
is really awful! 
 
But you go on forcing yourself, 
doing the same repetitive acts again and again 
-- not knowing what else to do, 
not knowing where else to go, 
not knowing that there are other alternatives possible, 
that there are alternative life-styles possible. 
 
And the greatest alternative is the religious dimension.
 
 
 
The religious dimension simply means the dimension 
of being conscious, 
of being alert, 
of living a life with self-remembrance. 
 
 
 
Let me add that by self-remembrance 
I don't mean self-consciousness. 
 
Self-consciousness is a false phenomenon; 
it is another name of ego. 
 
Self-remembering is a totally different phenomenon; 
it is the cessation of the ego. 
 
In self-consciousness there is no consciousness, 
there is only self; 
 
in self-remembering there is no self, 
only remembering.
 
 
 
Buddha's whole methodology is that of 
self-remembering: SAMMASATI.
 
 
 
It has been translated as 
right-mindfulness 
or 
right awareness. 
 
What is RIGHT awareness? 
 
Can awareness also be wrong? 
 
Yes, there is a possibility
if awareness becomes too much focused on the object it is wrong awareness. 
 
Awareness has to be aware of itself, 
then it is right awareness.
 
 
 
When you look at a tree, at a mountain, at a star, 
you can be conscious 
 
-- conscious of the tree, 
conscious of the mountain, 
conscious of the star -- 
 
but you are not conscious of the one who is conscious of all these things. 
 
This is wrong awareness, 
focused on the object. 
 
You have to unfocus it from the object, 
you have to help it turn inwards. 
 
You have to bring it to your own interiority, 
you have to fill your subjectivity with its light. 
 
When one is full of light, 
not showing other things in the light 
but only showing the light itself, 
then it is right awareness 
and that is the door to nirvana, to God
-- to self-actualization.
 
 
 
By birth you are only given an opportunity. 
There is no inner necessity that you will really become, 
that your potential will be realized, 
that you will really attain to beinghood. 
 
Only the opportunity is given, 
then it is up to you. 
 
You will have to find the way, 
you will have to find the master, 
you will have to find the right situation. 
 
 
 
It is a great challenge.
 
Life is a great challenge to know oneself. 
 
If this challenge is accepted, 
you really become man for the first time; 
 
otherwise you go on existing on a subhuman level.
 
 
 
And it is not only the worldly people who are living an unconscious life. 
 
The so-called religious are not in any way different.
 
 
 
Father Duffy was sent to a small Eskimo village in the coldest part of Alaska. 
Several months later, the bishop paid him a visit. 
 
"How do you like it up here among the Eskimos?"
 
"Just fine," 
 
replied the priest.
 
"And what about the weather?" 
 
asked the bishop.
 
"Ah, as long as I have my rosary and my vodka I don't care how cold it is." 
 
"I am glad to hear it. 
Say, I could go for a bit of vodka myself right now." 
 
"Absolutely," 
 
said Father Duffy. 
 
"Rosary! Would you bring us two vodkas?"
 
 
 
The worldly, the otherworldly, are not really different. 
 
There is only one difference that makes a difference and that is of awareness, alertness. 
 
And the awareness can be practiced anywhere: 
 
you need not go to the mountains, 
you need not go to the monasteries, 
you need not renounce the world.
 
In fact, IN the world it is easier to practice awareness than anywhere else. 
 
This is my own experience, 
and not only my personal experience 
but my observation of thousands of sannyasins, too. 
 
The easiest way to become aware is to be in the world and practice it, 
because the world gives you so many opportunities. 
 
A monastery cannot give you so many opportunities. 
 
Living in a mountain cave, 
what opportunities do you have to be alert? 
 
You will be more and more asleep there, 
more and more dull. 
 
Intelligence will not be required, 
hence you will lose all sharpness of intelligence. 
 
And awareness will not be required; 
there will be no challenge for it. 
 
It is only in challenges that life grows; 
the greater the challenge, 
the greater the opportunity. 
 
And the world is really full of challenges. 
 
Hence to my sannyasins I say: 
never renounce.
 
Rejoice in the world! 
 
In the past we have renounced too much 
and the result has been nil
 
 
 
How many buddhas have we produced in the past? 
 
They can be counted on the fingers. 
 
Only rarely, very rarely, a man became a Buddha, Christ or Krishna. 
 
Out of millions and millions of seeds only one seed sprouted? 
 
That is not much. 
 
It has been a sheer wastage of great human potential, 
and the reason has been the escapist attitude of the religions.
 
 
 
I affirm life,
I rejoice in life. 
 
And I would like you all to be deeply, intensely, passionately in life, 
with one condition only: 
 
alertness, 
watchfulness, 
witnessing. 
 
 
 
And I know the difficulty arises, 
because you will be living with millions of sleepy people 
-- and sleep is contagious; 
just as awareness is. 
 
Awareness, too, is contagious; 
hence the significance of being with a master.
 
 
 
The master cannot give you the truth. 
 
Nobody can give the truth to anybody else; 
it is untransferable. 
 
 
 
The master cannot take you to the ultimate goal, 
because there you will have to arrive alone, 
nobody can accompany you. 
 
You cannot reach there by imitating the master, 
because the more you imitate somebody, 
the falser you become. 
 
 
 
How can you arrive to truth by becoming false?
 
Then what is the function of a master? 
 
Then what is the use of searching for a master? 
 
Then why be a disciple at all? 
 
Still there is a reason, 
and the reason is that awareness is as contagious as sleepiness. 
 
If you sit with a few people who are all feeling sleepy you will start feeling sleepy.
 
 
 
A famous Sufi story says:
 
There was a fruit seller. 
 
He had a very cunning fox who used to watch his shop. 
 
Whenever he had to go out he would tell the fox, 
 
"Be alert. Sit in my place and just watch
Watch every activity that goes on around here. 
Don't allow anybody to steal anything. 
If somebody tries to steal, make noises 
-- I will run out of the house immediately."
 
One day Mulla Nasruddin was passing. 
He heard the shopkeeper talking to the fox, 
saying all these things, 
 
"Be alert, watch every activity that is going on around, 
and if you see that something is against us or somebody is trying to steal the fruits, 
make a noise immediately and I will come out."
 
Mulla Nasruddin was very much tempted. 
 
The shopkeeper went in. 
 
Nasruddin sat in front of the shop 
and just started pretending he was falling asleep; 
with closed eyes he started dozing.
 
For a moment the poor fox thought, 
 
"What to do? 
Should I make a noise? 
But sleep is not an activity 
-- in fact it is just the opposite -- 
and the master has said that if some activity goes on around.... 
This is not activity: 
this man is falling asleep, 
and what can a man who is asleep do, 
what harm?" 
 
But the fox was not aware that Mulla was trying a Sufi strategy! 
 
By pretending to be falling asleep, 
by dozing with closed eyes, 
slowly slowly he managed to make the fox fall asleep. 
 
Then he stole the fruits.
 
When the master came back, 
the fruits were gone... 
and the fox was snoring! 
 
He shook the fox and asked, 
 
"What is the matter? 
Didn't I tell you if any activity happens you have to make a noise so that I can come? 
But I never heard any noise."
 
The fox said, 
 
"But there was no activity happening. 
Just one man came; 
he sat in front of the shop and started dozing. 
Now, sleep is not an activity, is it? 
Sleep is inactivity." 
 
Simple logic! 
 
A poor fox and simple logic.
 
"Then what happened to you?" 
 
the owner asked.
 
The fox said, 
 
"That I don't know, what happened to me. 
But the more I watched the man dozing, 
somehow I started dozing myself 
and it was impossible to remain awake. 
I don't know when I fell asleep."
 
 
 
If a few people are dozing 
and you are sitting with them, 
you can see the point: 
the vibe of sleep reaches to you. 
 
And similar is the case... 
 
although a little difficult 
because sleep is downhill 
and awakening is uphill. 
 
It is a little harder task. 
 
But to be with a man who is awake, 
who is a buddha, is bound to make you alert 
-- just being with the master.
 
 
 
We are affected continuously by people around us. 
 
We may be absolutely oblivious of the fact that whatsoever we think has been given by others to us; 
whatsoever we feel, even that, too, has been given to us by others. 
 
 
 
The child learns by imitation. 
 
Even our emotions may be just borrowed, 
not only our thoughts; 
our sentiments may be just borrowed.
 
People even can die just because of a borrowed idea. 
 
What is a motherland?
 
-- an idea which we go on stuffing in the heads of small children. 
 
And we go on telling them that to die for the motherland is to be a great man, is to be a martyr; 
to die for the motherland is the greatest virtue.
 
 
 
In the past they used to say the same thing about religions, churches: 
 
"To die for the church, 
to die for your religion, 
is the sure way to enter into paradise. 
 
Instantly you are uplifted into paradise if you die for your religion." 
 
Kill others for your religion and it is not sin; 
 
die for your own religion and it is not suicide. 
 
Killing is not murder, 
committing suicide is not suicide! 
 
Once these ideas have been 
implanted in your being, 
imprinted in your being, 
they start functioning from there.
 
 
 
Three boys, a Catholic, a Jew, and a black kid, were sitting on a curb. 
 
A priest and a rabbi saw the boys.
 
The Catholic priest recognized one of the kids as a member of his parish, so he said, 
 
"Sonny, what are the two biggest things in your life?"
 
He said, 
 
"Father, the two biggest things in my life are the Catholic church and my priest."
 
The rabbi looked down and recognized the Jewish kid from his congregation. He said, 
 
"Son, what are the two biggest things in your life?"
 
"Rabbi, the two biggest things in my life are my congregation and my rabbi."
 
Both members of the clergy left smugly satisfied. 
 
Then the little colored kid looked at his two buddies and said, 
 
"Say, ain't neither one of you little mama's boys never had no girls nor watermelon yet?"
 
 
 
We learn from others. 
 
It may be your idea of God, 
it may be the priest, the rabbi 
-- or the watermelon! 
 
It is all the same: 
we learn from others.
 
 
 
In the close intimacy with a master, 
two things happen: 
 
one is 
his contagious awareness, 
his contagious love, 
his contagious compassion; 
 
and second, 
a great unlearning. 
 
 
 
Whatsoever you have learned from sleepy people, 
whether it is about the watermelon or about the rabbi 
-- there is not much difference between watermelons and rabbis! 
 
What you have learned from 
the established church 
and the state 
and the educational system, 
which are all serving vested interests, 
which are all serving the past, the dead past, 
which are not in your service.... 
 
Remember, 
they are to exploit you, 
they are to reduce you to machines 
-- efficient, 
 
but machines are machines, 
whether efficient or not efficient. 
 
Their function is to make you slaves of the society 
-- and the society is ill, 
the society is insane, 
the society is pathological.
 
 
 
Two things happen in the affinity of the master: 
 
the first, 
his contagious awareness; 
 
and the second: 
a process of unlearning. 
 
 
 
He starts destroying all that you have learned. 
 
He cannot give you the truth, 
I repeat, 
but he can take away the lies. 
 
And that is one of the most essential things; 
without it, the truth can never happen to you. 
 
Truth is going to happen to you in your aloneness, 
 
but before it can happen all the blocks have to be removed: 
 
the blocks of lies that have been placed in the way of truth.
 
The master can take away your lies. 
 
His function is negative in that way, 
and positive in being contagious. 
 
 
 
His vibe can touch and wake you up. 
 
He can be a sunray entering through the window in your bedroom, 
falling on your face, 
and telling you that, 
 
"It is morning, now get up!" 
 
making it very difficult for you to sleep. 
 
Yes, the master can make it difficult for you to sleep 
and difficult for you to imitate 
and difficult for you to learn from those who are really your enemies and not your friends.
 
 
 
If these two things are possible, 
your life starts moving, 
you are no longer stuck. 
 
Your seed has fallen into the right soil: 
now in the right time the sprout will come. 
 
Soon there will be spring 
and you will see your own flowers. 
 
And the flowers of consciousness are the greatest flowers there are.
 
 
 
The sutras:
 
 
 
HE IS THE CHARIOTEER.
HE HAS TAMED HIS HORSES, PRIDE AND THE SENSES.
EVEN THE GODS ADMIRE HIM.
 
 
 
The moment your potential becomes actual, 
the moment you are a realized soul, 
even gods admire you. 
 
Even gods are far behind, 
because even gods have not yet become buddhas. 
 
They are also living unconscious lives 
-- maybe living in heaven. 
 
What you call angels in Christianity are called gods in Buddhism. 
 
The angels living in heaven, 
even they are not buddhas; 
they are as asleep as you are. 
 
The only difference is in their situation: 
they are in paradise 
and you are on earth. 
 
But the difference is not in their psychology; 
as far as their inner being is concerned it is as dark as yours.
 
 
 
Hindus have never been able to forgive Buddha, 
because he said that even gods admire a buddha, 
even gods worship a buddha.
 
The story is told that 
when Buddha became a buddha, 
when Gautama Siddhartha became enlightened, 
became a buddha, 
gods came from paradise to worship him. 
 
They touched his feet and they showered celestial flowers 
and they played celestial music. 
 
 
 
Hindus have never been able to forgive Buddhists for this story
-- gods worshipping a man? 
 
But see the point: 
 
the gods are not worshipping a man, 
 
the gods are worshipping awareness, 
the gods are worshipping buddhahood. 
 
Gods are not worshipping Gautama Siddhartha the man, 
but the flame that has happened into his heart. 
 
That flame is eternal light, 
that flame is divine. 
 
And even gods are yet far far away from it; 
they have to attain it.
 
The idea of a buddha is higher than the idea of gods. 
 
Buddhism is the only religion of the world which has given man such dignity; 
 
no other religion has dignified man so highly. 
 
Buddhism is the religion of man.
 
A Buddhist poet, Chandidas, has said: 
 
 
 
SABAR UPAR MANUS SATYA, 
TAHAR UPAR NAHIN 
 
-- the truth of man is the highest truth, 
there is no higher truth than that.
 
 
 
But the truth of man does not mean the body of man, 
the bones and the blood and the marrow, no. 
 
The truth of man means the flame which is not yet lit in you. 
 
Once it is lit you are transported into a totally different world. 
 
You have become part of the whole, 
you are no longer separate. 
 
 
 
The way to reach to this actualization is: 
HE IS THE CHARIOTEER. 
 
He becomes a conscious master. 
 
His body is a chariot, 
he drives it where he wants to, 
not vice versa
 
 
 
The unconscious man is driven by his body.
 
Just watch yourself: 
your body goes on driving you. 
 
Just a moment before you were not hungry, 
and you pass by the side of a restaurant, 
and the smell of food... 
and suddenly you start feeling hungry. 
 
The body is deceiving you, 
because just a moment before you were not hungry at all, 
there was no hunger. 
 
This hunger is the body driving you towards food. 
 
You were not even thinking of food just a moment before, 
and the smells coming from the bakery 
-- and suddenly a great desire, a great hunger, has arisen in you.
 
It is the body driving you; 
you are not the charioteer. 
 
 
 
The chariot has become the master. 
This is the ordinary situation.
 
 
 
HE HAS TAMED HIS HORSES.... 
 
 
 
Senses are called the horses. 
 
In the ancient days in India 
there were chariots with five horses. 
 
Great kings used to move in chariots with five horses. 
 
Those who were the greatest, 
those who were called CHAKRAVARTINS 
-- the world rulers -- 
they used to move in chariots with seven horses. 
 
Five horses represent the five senses...  
and your five senses are continuously influencing you. 
 
A man who wants to be really conscious has to start by becoming alert of these things.
 
If you take your dinner at a particular time every day, 
and you see the clock and it is time.... 
 
The clock may have stopped, 
the clock may not be right, 
the clock may be one hour ahead, 
but if it is time, immediately there is hunger. 
 
Now, this hunger is false, 
created by the senses, 
created by the body 
-- and you are going to be driven by these senses your whole life?
 
All over the world, 
seekers of truth have become aware of this phenomenon 
 
and they have reacted in two ways; 
 
one is right, 
the other is wrong. 
 
 
 
The wrong way is to start fighting with your senses and your body. 
 
By fighting you will never win. 
 
By fighting you will become weaker, 
you will be dissipating energy. 
 
By fighting you will become repressive 
-- and that which is repressed will take revenge sooner or later. 
 
Whenever it will find any opportunity to take possession of you, 
it is bound to take possession of you 
-- and with a vengeance!
 
You can fast for three days, 
you can force your body to fast, 
but if it is repression, 
the fourth day the body will take revenge 
-- you will eat too much, 
for a few days you will eat too much.
 
In fact, if you had lost any weight in those three days, 
you will gain more weight within a week. 
 
The body has taken the revenge, 
the body has taught you a lesson.
 
 
 
Fighting is not the way 
-- not the way of the buddhas. 
 
Fighting is stupid; 
it is your own body, 
you need not fight with it, 
 
you have just to be more watchful of it. 
 
If some watchfulness starts crystallizing in you, 
you will be surprised that the body starts following you. 
 
It no longer commands you, 
it no longer orders you: 
it becomes obedient to you.
 
 
 
When the master has arrived, 
the servants immediately fall in line. 
 
But the master is asleep, 
that's why the servants are pretending to be the masters.
 
 
 
HE IS THE CHARIOTEER. 
HE HAS TAMED HIS HORSES.... 
 
 
 
They have not to be killed or destroyed but tamed. 
 
They are beautiful animals! 
 
If tamed they can be of tremendous value
they can be of great service to you.
 
A buddha is not one who destroys his senses, 
but is one who makes his senses 
more clear, 
more clean, 
more sensitive 
-- but he remains the master. 
 
A buddha sees far more than you see, 
his eyes are far more receptive, 
because there is no smoke in his eyes, 
no clouds in his consciousness.
 
 
 
He sees the same green trees, 
but the trees are far greener for him than they are for you. 
 
He smells the same perfume 
but it is far more for him than it is for you. 
 
He sees the same beauty, 
but it gives him great ecstasy. 
 
 
 
It may not give you any ecstasy at all; 
you may bypass it. 
 
You may not even see the nazunia flower by the side of the road. 
 
 
 
What to say of the nazunia 
-- you may not even see a roseflower. 
 
You are so much occupied, 
your senses are so full of information; 
they are not empty and available. 
 
Your senses are not very sensitive.
 
 
 
The buddha does not kill them, 
but many saints have been doing that stupidity. 
 
There have been Christian saints in Russia 
-- a long tradition -- 
who used to cut off their genital organs; 
the nuns used to cut off their breasts. 
 
Ridiculous, stupid! 
 
What more stupidity can you expect than this? 
 
How can you be a master by cutting off your genital organs? 
 
-- because sexuality is not there, 
sexuality is in the head. 
 
And, of course, you cannot cut off your head. 
 
And even if you cut it off, 
it is not going to make any difference; 
you will be born again with a far filthier head!
 
Now we know 
-- scientific research has proved it beyond doubt -- 
that sexuality has nothing to do with the genital organs; 
it is not there. 
 
The genital organs are triggered by the head; 
in the brain there are centers. 
 
 
 
Pavlov and B.F. Skinner's work has been of tremendous value in this field. 
 
I don't agree with their behavioristic approach, 
but what they have researched can be used by the mystics, 
can be used by the seekers of truth, 
by the explorers of their inner being, 
in a very valuable way.
 
Skinner has found that in the brain there are centers 
-- centers for food, 
centers for sex, 
centers for everything. 
 
You touch with an electrode the sex center in the brain, 
and immediately you have an orgasm. 
 
A great joy arises in you as if you have made love to a woman. 
 
Skinner was experimenting with rats; 
he fixed an electrode in the sex center in the brain of the rat 
and he taught the rat how to push a button if he wants an orgasm. 
 
He was surprised what the rat did; 
he had never thought that rats are so sexual. 
 
The rat completely forgot about food, about everything. 
 
Even if there was danger, 
even if a cat was brought, the rat was unafraid. 
 
Who cares? 
 
He was continuously pushing the button, continuously... 
six thousand times! 
 
Until the rat fell utterly exhausted, almost dead, 
he went on pushing, 
because each push and there was an orgasm.
 
 
 
Now sooner or later this is going to happen to you too! 
 
It will be far easier, far more comfortable 
-- because to have a woman or to have a man is such a conflict. 
 
You can just have a small, matchbox-sized computer in your pocket 
-- nobody will ever know what you are doing! 
 
You can go on moving your rosary 
and with the other hand you can push the button, 
and people will think that the ecstasy is happening 
because of the rosary. 
 
And your face will glow.... 
 
But if it becomes possible you will be in the same situation as the rat: 
you will die by pushing your button too much, 
you will forget everything else.
 
 
 
Genital organs have nothing to do with sex; 
everything is contained in the brain. 
 
Your hunger has nothing to do with your stomach; 
that too is contained in the brain. 
 
That's why at the right time, 
looking at the clock, 
suddenly the hunger. 
 
And the smell of the bakery does not go into the stomach, 
remember, it goes into the brain. 
 
It triggers a certain center in your brain, 
it pushes a button in the brain, 
and suddenly you are hungry. 
 
Now, destroying your body is not going to help, 
starving your body is not going to help. 
 
Even committing suicide is not going to help. 
 
 
 
Only one thing can help, 
and that is awareness.
 
 
 
If you become aware... 
awareness is not a part of the brain. 
 
Awareness is behind the brain, 
awareness is capable of seeing the brain.
 
You will be surprised to know that 
whatsoever modern psychological methods have been able to discover was discovered thousands of years before by the mystics in the East. 
 
 
 
Buddha was perfectly aware of the brain centers, 
 
Patanjali was perfectly aware of the brain centers. 
 
 
 
And the only way is to find something which is beyond the brain 
and move to that beyond and remain there. 
 
There is your mastery; 
from there you are the charioteer, 
from there all the horses are in your hands. 
 
And then they are beautiful! 
 
Senses are not ugly -- nothing is ugly. 
 
Even sex has its own beauty, 
its own sacredness, 
its own holiness. 
 
 
 
But if you are rooted and centered 
in your beyond, 
in your consciousness, 
 
then everything has a different meaning, a different context. 
 
Then eating has its own spirituality.
 
 
 
The Upanishads say: 
ANNAM BRAHMA -- food is God. 
 
The man who had said this must have tasted God in food. 
 
 
 
And the tantrikas in the East have been saying it for centuries, 
that sex has the greatest potential to realize samadhi. 
 
 
 
It is the closest point 
-- the sexual orgasm is the closest to the spiritual orgasm, 
 
hence you can learn much from it. 
 
In sexual orgasm 
time disappears, 
ego disappears, 
mind disappears. 
 
In sexual orgasm, 
for a moment the whole world stops.
 
 
 
The same happens in the spiritual orgasm on a far bigger scale. 
 
The sexual is momentary 
and the spiritual is eternal, 
 
but the sexual gives you a glimpse of the spiritual.
 
 
 
Senses have to be tamed, 
not to be destroyed, 
 
remember. ... 
 
 
 
PRIDE AND THE SENSES. 
EVEN THE GODS ADMIRE HIM. 
 
 
 
Tame the senses, 
tame the pride. 
 
If the pride masters you, it is ego; 
 
if you are the master, 
then it is only self-respect. 
 
And every person of integrity has self-respect. 
 
Self-respect is not egoistic, not at all. 
 
Self-respect simply means, 
 
"I love myself,
I respect myself, 
and I will not allow anybody to humiliate me. 
 
I will not humiliate anybody 
and I will not allow anybody to humiliate me. 
 
I will not create slavery for anybody 
and I will not be a slave to anybody either."
 
That is pride tamed. 
 
Then it has become a servant and it is beautiful.
 
 
 
YIELDING LIKE THE EARTH,
JOYOUS AND CLEAR LIKE THE LAKE, 
STILL AS THE STONE AT THE DOOR, 
HE IS FREE FROM LIFE AND DEATH.
 
 
 
The man who has become awakened 
becomes YIELDING LIKE THE EARTH. 
 
He loses all rigidity. 
 
He is not like a rock; 
he is like soft earth. 
 
And only the soft earth can be fertile, can be creative. 
 
 
 
The rock remains impotent; 
it creates nothing, 
nothing grows on it, 
nothing can grow in it. 
 
The rock remains utterly empty. 
 
But the yielding earth 
-- soft, 
humble, 
surrendering, 
receptive, 
womblike -- 
can give birth to new experiences, 
can give birth to new visions, new songs, new poetries. 
 
The awakened person is not rigid. 
 
 
 
In the words of Lao Tzu, 
he is not like the rock but like water. 
 
His way is the way of water 
-- the watercourse way.
 
 
 
JOYOUS AND CLEAR LIKE THE LAKE.... 
 
 
 
The man who is awakened, who is alert, 
becomes clear; 
 
all his confusions are gone. 
 
Not that he has been able to find solutions, no, 
but because all his questions have disappeared. 
 
Not that he has found the answers 
-- there is no answer to be found. 
 
Life is a mystery 
and remains a mystery; 
 
life cannot be demystified. 
 
And because he knows the mystery of life 
and now there are no longer any questions 
and no longer any conflicting answers, 
 
he is very clear, 
he is clarity itself, 
and he is joyous.
 
 
 
Why is he joyous? 
 
-- because now he knows that 
the whole kingdom of God is his. 
 
Now he knows that he is not an outsider here, 
that he belongs to existence 
and the existence belongs to him. 
 
He has become part of this infinite celebration that goes on and on. 
 
He is a song in this celebration, 
a dance in this celebration.
 
 
 
STILL AS THE STONE AT THE DOOR.... 
 
 
 
Yielding like the earth 
and still like the rock, 
silent, unmoving.... 
 
 
 
HE IS FREE FROM LIFE AND DEATH. 
 
 
 
And he is not only free from death, 
 
remember: 
the moment you are free from death 
you are free from this life also 
-- this so-called life. 
 
Then there is another life.... 
 
Buddha does not name it, 
he will not give it any definition; 
he simply leaves it there. 
 
He leaves the sentence incomplete, 
because he knows anything said will destroy the beauty of it. 
 
Anything said will give it a limitation, 
and it is unlimited. 
 
Anything said is bound to be inadequate.
 
 
 
So he says only one thing: 
he is free from this life and this death. 
 
 
 
The life that you have known and the death that happens every day 
-- this life and this death both disappear for the awakened one. 
 
Time disappears, 
and life and death are two sides of time. 
 
Then he is eternity. 
 
He becomes one with the whole; 
you cannot find him as a separate entity anywhere.
 
 
 
Where is Gautama the Buddha now? 
 
Now he is in the air you breathe 
and in the water you drink 
and in the birds that go on singing 
and in the trees 
and in the clouds. 
 
Where is Buddha now? 
 
He has become the universe
 
 
 
The dewdrop has become the ocean, 
but the dewdrop has disappeared as a dewdrop. 
 
Now there is no life and death for the dewdrop; 
it exists no more 
-- how can there be a life for it? 
 
It exists no more, 
so how can it die? 
 
It has gone beyond the duality of life and death.
 
 
 
HIS THOUGHTS ARE STILL. 
HIS WORDS ARE STILL.
 
 
 
This is a tremendously important statement. 
 
 
 
HIS THOUGHTS ARE STILL. 
 
 
 
That is simple and can be understood, 
because a man who is alert need not think.
 
Thinking is needed 
because we cannot see. 
 
If a blind man wants to go out of this hall 
he will have to think; 
he will have to ask somebody; 
 
he will have to plan 
where to move, 
where are the steps, 
where is the door, 
and he will grope with his stick. 
 
But if a man has eyes 
he need not ask, 
he need not think. 
 
He simply gets up, 
he simply starts moving towards the door. 
 
He gets out of the door, 
not thinking about it at all. 
 
But the blind man cannot afford not to think. 
 
And this is how the sleepy man has to think 
-- the sleepy man is blind.
 
 
 
The man with awareness has inner eyes, has insight. 
 
He can see, 
and because he can see 
he need not think. 
 
Seeing is enough. 
 
 
 
Thinking is a poor substitute for seeing. 
 
 
 
HIS THOUGHTS ARE STILL.... 
 
 
 
But even more important is the statement: 
 
 
 
HIS WORDS ARE STILL. 
 
 
 
It is a contradiction in terms: 
 
"His words" means he speaks. 
 
Buddha spoke; 
 
otherwise we would not have these tremendously significant sutras. 
 
For forty-two years he was speaking continuously 
-- day in, day out, 
year in, year out; 
morning, afternoon, evening 
he was speaking. 
 
But he says: 
 
 
 
HIS WORDS ARE STILL.
 
 
 
If you are really attuned, 
if you are really silent in the presence of the master, 
you will see: 
 
 
 
HIS WORDS ARE STILL. 
 
 
 
His words carry a silence around them, 
his words are not noisy. 
 
His words have a melody, a rhythm, a music, 
and at the very core of his words is utter silence. 
 
If you can penetrate his words 
you will come across infinite silence.
 
 
 
But to penetrate the words of a buddha, 
 
the way is not analysis, 
the way is not argument, 
the way is not discussing. 
 
 
 
The way is falling in rapport with him, 
becoming attuned with him, 
being in a synchronicity with him. 
 
 
 
It happens: 
a moment comes between the disciple and the master 
when the very heart of the master and the heart of the disciple beat in the same rhythm, 
when the breathing of the master and the breathing of the disciple are in the same rhythm. 
 
When the master breathes out, 
the disciple breathes out; 
 
when the master breathes in, 
the disciple breathes in. 
 
Everything becomes so attuned.
 
In that attunement, 
in that at-onement, 
one enters into the very core of the master's words. 
 
And there you will not find any sound, any noise; 
 
there you will find absolute silence. 
 
And to taste it is to understand the master. 
 
 
 
The meaning of the word is not important, 
 
remember, 
but the silence of the word. 
 
 
 
The meaning can be understood by anybody who understands language, 
that is not difficult; 
 
but the silence can be understood 
only by the disciple, 
not by the student.
 
 
 
The student listens to the word, 
understands its meaning, 
and that's that. 
 
He will understand the philosophy of Buddha, 
but he will not understand the Buddha himself. 
 
He will understand his theories, 
but he will miss his being.
 
 
 
The disciple may not be able to say 
what his master's teaching is, 
he may not be able to reproduce his philosophy, 
he may be at a loss. 
 
If you ask him, 
 
"What is the teaching of your master?" 
 
he may become dumb. 
 
But he understands the master 
-- not what he says but what he is.
 
 
 
There is a very beautiful story:
 
When Buddha died, 
all the enlightened disciples gathered together to write down the message of the Buddha, 
because now the master is gone 
and for the coming generations the treasure has to be collected.
 
There were great enlightened disciples, 
but nobody could exactly reproduce it. 
 
A few of them were absolutely silent; 
when they were asked they shrugged their shoulders. 
 
A few said, 
 
"It is impossible, it can't be done." 
 
A few others said, 
 
"We would not like to commit any mistakes, 
and mistakes are bound to happen, 
because what we have seen in the man is impossible to express in language." 
 
In fact, not a single enlightened disciple was ready to compile the philosophy of the Buddha.
 
 
 
Then Ananda was approached. 
 
He was the only one who had lived with Buddha for forty-two years 
and was not yet enlightened. 
 
He had remembered all, everything; 
he had the whole collection, word for word. 
 
His memory must have been just extraordinary. 
 
But there was a problem. 
 
The problem was: 
can you believe in the words of an unenlightened person about an enlightened person?
 
Those who are enlightened are not ready to say anything; 
the one who is ready to reproduce the whole philosophy, word for word, from the beginning to the end, from the first statement that Buddha made to the last... 
but he is not enlightened. 
 
Can you rely on his memory? 
 
Can you rely on his interpretation? 
 
Now, this is really an insoluble problem: 
those who know, 
those who can be relied upon, 
are not ready to say anything, 
and the one who is ready to say cannot be relied upon 
-- he is not enlightened himself. 
 
Then the whole gathering told Ananda, 
 
"Do one thing -- don't waste a single moment. 
Bring your total energies and become as alert as possible. 
 
If you can become enlightened before your death, 
then something is possible. 
 
We will not collect your statements unless you are enlightened. 
 
You remember
-- you are the only one who remembers absolutely --
but we cannot trust it."
 
How can you trust a blind man's report about someone who had eyes and was talking about colors, light, rainbows, flowers? 
 
How can you believe in the report of a blind man? 
 
It is absurd, it cannot be believed!
 
So the congregation prayed to Ananda, 
 
"You are the only hope. 
If you can become enlightened we will be able to accept whatsoever you say, 
but we will not be able to accept it unless you become enlightened."
 
Ananda had lived for forty-two years with Buddha, 
but because Buddha was so close to him 
he had started taking him for granted. 
 
It happens. 
It happens here too. 
 
Many of you who are close to me can start taking me for granted. 
 
Ananda was very close, the closest one; 
he was not much concerned about his enlightenment
 
Whenever he was told he said, 
 
"I am not worried about it. 
Buddha is going to take care of me. 
I have been serving him for forty-two years 
-- is he not compassionate enough to help drag me out of the darkness
He will do it. 
And what is the hurry? 
Why be in such a haste? 
It can happen tomorrow, 
it can happen the day after tomorrow
Buddha is there."
 
And for forty-two years he had been postponing 
and believing deep down in his heart that, 
 
"Buddha will do it. 
Although he says nobody can make anybody else enlightened, 
I know he can do it. 
I know miracles have been happening around him. 
 
And at least, if not for anybody else, 
for me he is going to make an exception.
I have served him so much. 
And then he is always there; 
if today I miss, tomorrow; 
if tomorrow I miss, the day after tomorrow
Where is he going? 
He is always there."
 
The day Buddha died, 
he said to Ananda,
 
"Ananda, now I will not be here tomorrow. 
So make haste, hurry! 
Now no more postponing."
 
And it happened that after Buddha's death, 
when the congregation prayed to Ananda, 
for twenty-four hours he sat with closed eyes.
 
This was for the first time in his whole life.
 
In fact, there was so much happening around Buddha that it was impossible to close the eyes. 
 
The whole day so many things were happening and Ananda was too occupied. 
 
 
 
Now Buddha was gone 
and nothing was happening anymore, 
there was nothing to see. 
 
He closed his eyes and for twenty-four hours, 
for the first time, 
he sat in silence.
 
He became enlightened within twenty-four hours. 
 
This had not happened in forty-two years; 
it happened in twenty-four hours. 
 
 
 
When he became enlightened, 
when all the enlightened disciples recognized his aura, his light, his luminousness, 
then they said,
 
"Now Ananda can be allowed to come in the assembly. 
He can relate and we will compile."
 
 
 
That's how all the Buddhist sutras have been compiled.
 
But only an enlightened person can be trusted. 
 
Why? 
 
-- because he can see. 
 
And he can see into the words 
and find the silence
 
-- which is the real message. 
 
 
 
If you listen to the meaning, 
you are a student; 
 
if you listen to the silence, 
you are a disciple. 
 
 
 
And if you completely forget 
 
who is talking 
and 
who is listening, 
 
you become one with the master 
-- you are a devotee.
 
 
 
These are the three stages: 
 
the student, 
the disciple 
and the devotee. 
 
 
 
The student understands the meaning of the words, 
the disciple understands the silence of the words, 
and the devotee becomes the silence itself. 
 
 
 
HIS THOUGHTS ARE STILL. 
HIS WORDS ARE STILL.
HIS WORK IS STILLNESS.
 
 
 
His whole work is stillness, 
he creates stillness. 
 
He creates devices to create stillness. 
 
 
 
HE SEES HIS FREEDOM AND IS FREED.
THE MASTER SURRENDERS HIS BELIEFS.
 
 
 
Once you become enlightened 
all that you have believed before becomes 
ridiculous, 
irrelevant, 
absurd, 
nonsense. 
 
It is like the belief of the blind man in light. 
 
Whatsoever he had believed before, 
whatsoever he had thought in his blindness that light is... 
 
once his eyes open 
he will have to drop all his beliefs about light. 
 
 
 
Not a single word out of those beliefs is going to be true. 
 
It is impossible for the blind man to conceive what light is. 
 
What to say about light? 
 
-- the blind man cannot even conceive anything about darkness either, 
because to see darkness you need eyes as much as to see light. 
 
The blind man knows nothing of darkness and nothing of light.
 
 
 
Once you become awakened all your beliefs in 
gods, 
heaven, 
hell, 
karma, 
reincarnation, 
this and that, 
they all become simply rubbish. 
 
 
 
THE MASTER SURRENDERS HIS BELIEFS....
HE SEES BEYOND THE END AND THE BEGINNING.
 
 
 
Now there is no need to believe 
-- he can see beyond the beginning and beyond the end. 
 
He can see the whole through and through. 
 
Seeing is the goal.
 
 
 
In India we don't have an equivalent word for philosophy. 
 
We have a totally different word for it, 
that is DARSHAN. 
 
Ordinarily it is translated as 'philosophy'; 
it is not. 
 
Philosophy means something of the mind; 
 
DARSHAN simply means 
insight, 
seeing. 
 
 
 
In the East we have called the greatest ones, 
the seers. 
 
We have not called them prophets, 
we have not called them philosophers, 
 
we have called them seers -- they have seen. 
 
 
 
The East has always believed in seeing, 
not in thinking.
 
To translate 'DARSHAN' into English is very difficult. 
 
To call it philosophy is to be unfair; 
it destroys the whole beauty of the word 'DARSHAN'. 
 
So I translate it with 'philosia'. 
 
 
 
Philosophy means love for knowledge: 
 
'sophia' means knowledge, 
'philo' means love. 
 
 
 
Philosia means love for seeing 
-- 'sia' means seeing. 
 
Once you have seen, 
all beliefs wither away like dry leaves falling from the trees.
 
 
 
HE CUTS ALL TIES.
HE GIVES UP ALL HIS DESIRES. 
HE RESISTS ALL TEMPTATION. 
AND HE RISES.
 
 
 
Now a totally new law starts functioning: 
 
the law of levitation. 
 
Ordinarily things fall downwards, 
but the man of awakening rises upwards. 
 
Everything in him starts rising upwards, 
soaring upwards. 
 
He has to cut all ties, 
because those ties are with the earth. 
 
He has to give up all desires, 
because those desires are the ties that keep him tethered to the earth.
 
 
 
HE RESISTS ALL TEMPTATION. 
 
 
 
Many times the old mind will try to assert itself. 
 
Many many times the mind will make efforts to bring you back to the earth.
 
 
 
Kahlil Gibran says: 
 
When a river comes closer to the sea, 
it waits for a moment, looks backwards 
-- all those joys, 
the mountains, the virgin snows where it originated, 
the forests, the solitude of the forests, 
the birds, their songs, 
the people, 
the plains, 
thousands of experiences, 
the long journey.... 
 
And now the moment has come to disappear into the ocean. 
 
The whole past pulls backwards. 
 
The whole past says, 
 
"Wait! You will be lost forever. 
You will never be the same. 
Without your banks, how can you be? 
You will lose your definition."
 
 
 
Exactly the same happens when you come closer to buddhahood: 
when all is being lost, all ties, all desires, great temptations arise. 
 
There is no Devil to tempt you; 
 
it is your own mind, 
your own past experiences. 
 
Your whole loaded past tries to pull you backwards, 
but now nothing can pull you backwards. 
 
The call has been heard, 
the invitation has arrived.
 
 
 
HE CUTS ALL TIES. 
HE GIVES UP ALL HIS DESIRES. 
HE RESISTS ALL TEMPTATION. 
AND HE RISES.
AND WHEREVER HE LIVES,
IN THE CITY OR THE COUNTRY, 
IN THE VALLEY OR IN THE HILLS, 
THERE IS GREAT JOY.
 
 
 
And not only that he is joyous: 
 
wherever he is he brings a climate of joy. 
Joy surrounds him.
 
It is said that wherever Buddha would move, 
trees would bloom out of season, 
rivers would start flowing in the summer season when there was no water. 
 
Wherever Buddha would move 
there would be peace, silence, love, compassion, all around. 
 
This is really so; 
not that trees will bloom out of season 
-- these are metaphors -- 
 
but whenever there is a buddha something mysterious starts happening. 
 
People start blooming out of season, joy spreads, great waves of joy.
 
When you enter into the buddhafield 
you enter into a totally different world: 
 
the world of blessings, 
the world of benedictions.
 
 
 
EVEN IN THE EMPTY FOREST HE FINDS JOY
BECAUSE HE WANTS NOTHING.
 
 
 
And he is everywhere joyous, 
because the only thing that destroys your natural capacity of rejoicing is 
your desiring mind. 
 
The desiring mind makes you a beggar. 
 
Once all desires have been dropped 
you are the emperor. 
 
Joy is a natural state of your being.
 
Just let there be no desire and see. 
 
 
 
When there is no desire there is no mind. 
 
When there is no desire there is no turmoil. 
 
When there is no desire there is no past, no future. 
 
When there is no desire you are utterly contented herenow. 
 
And to be contented herenow is joy.
 
And whenever such a man moves, 
wherever he moves, 
he brings his climate with him. 
 
 
 
A buddha is in the spring season all the year round. 
 
And fortunate are those who come in some way close to him, 
blessed are those who become associated with him, 
 
because they also share 
his joy, 
his benediction, 
his wisdom, 
his love, 
his light.
 
 
 
Enough for today.
 
 
 
Continue to The Dhammapada: The Way of the Buddha, Vol 3 chapter 8 ‘A good belly laughter’…
 
 
 
from osho talks
 
The Dhammapada: The Way of the Buddha, Vol 3
 
Talks given from 11/08/79 am to 21/08/79 am
English Discourse series
 
chapter 7 : He is the charioteer
 
18 August 1979 am in Buddha Hall
 
If you would like to read it in PDF,
there is a free download of this all osho discourses from OSHO RAJNEESH,
please click here.
 
 
 
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about subtle body and chakra
yoga : the alpha and the omega, vol 9 ch1
 
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In this blog, I also shared osho discourse of 
the Tao's 'The secret of the Golden Flower
黄金の華の秘密(太乙金華宗旨)'
and 'The Tao Te Ching 道徳経' by Lao Tzu 老子.
These two show you the way to the enlightenment.
 
If you are interested
please take a look and enjoy!
 
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The secret of the Golden Flower
黄金の華の秘密(太乙金華宗旨)
 
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The Tao Te Ching 
道徳経 by Lao Tzu 老子
 
 
 
beloved osho
beloved gautam buddha 
beloved all enlightened masters
beloved all
 
 
 
”The last word of Buddha was, sammasati. 
Remember that you are a buddha – sammasati.”
 
 
 
sammasati
It means right remembrance.
 
 
 
meditation & love
 
 
 
osho samadhi समाधिः
 
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The Dhammapada Vol. 3: The Way of the Buddha

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ch6 : The Dhammapada: The Way of the Buddha, Vol 3

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'And in no-mind you will know the ultimate truth, DHAMMA.
And moving from mind to no-mind is the step, PADA. 
And this is the whole secret of THE DHAMMAPADA.'
 
 
 
ch6 : The Dhammapada: The Way of the Buddha, Vol 3
 
chapter 6
There is no evolution
 
17 August 1979 am in Buddha Hall
 
 
 
The first question:
Question 1
BELOVED MASTER,
COULD THERE BE AN ULTIMATE GOAL OF THE PHYSICAL EVOLUTIONARY PROCESS? 
IF SO, WHAT IS IT?
 
 
 
Digvijay, 
 
there is no goal of life. 
 
Life itself is its goal. 
 
It is not moving towards some target. 
 
It is herenow, 
it has no future. 
 
Life is always in the present. 
 
 
 
But the mind cannot live in the present: 
mind dies in the present. 
 
Hence, down the ages, 
mystics have invented devices to bring the mind to the present. 
 
The moment the mind comes to the present, 
it melts as snow, melts in the hot sun; 
it disappears, evaporates.
 
And the disappearance of the mind is the greatest experience possible to human beings, 
because in that disappearance is the appearance of God.
 
 
 
Mind lives in the future; 
future is its territory, its kingdom. 
 
And future is possible only through goal orientation. 
 
So mind makes goals out of everything; 
life must have a goal 
-- not only a goal but an ultimate goal. 
 
Then mind is perfectly happy, 
then it can protect itself: 
how to achieve that goal, 
how to reach to that ultimate?
 
The moment you can ask, "How?" 
mind is perfectly at ease. 
 
It is very clever, cunning, skillful in inventing ways and means to achieve something, whatsoever it is 
-- but it has to be there in the future. 
 
Mind lives through creating goals: 
political, 
social, 
evolutionary, 
spiritual, 
and so on and so forth; 
but the mind needs some goal to exist, 
it feeds on it.
 
In truth, all is and nothing is going to happen. 
 
Tomorrow never comes. 
It is always now and here.
 
 
 
The mystic approach is totally different from the goal-oriented mind. 
 
The mystic says, 
 
"Live the moment in its totality, 
love the moment in its totality, 
drown yourself in this overwhelming existence, 
and you will come closer and closer to God." 
 
 
 
By "God" I don't mean some person; 
by "God" I simply mean the essential core of existence, the center of the cyclone.
 
The universe is the circumference and God is the center. 
 
If you dive deep in the now, in the here, 
you are bound to encounter the center. 
 
And the miracle is that the center of all is also your center too. 
 
To become aware of it, 
to live that center, 
from that center, 
into full awareness, 
is to be a buddha, is to be enlightened.
 
 
 
But remember, 
buddhahood is not an ultimate goal. 
 
It is not something which has to be achieved somewhere else.
 
It is available right now 
-- immediately it is available, 
not ultimately. 
 
 
 
Remember these two words: 
the ultimate 
and 
the immediate. 
 
The ultimate brings the mind in, 
the immediate helps the mind to disappear.
 
 
 
To me, the immediate is the ultimate. 
There is no goal, physical, psychological, spiritual. 
 
All is as it should be... it already is. 
 
Drop your tensions, anxieties for the future, 
what is going to happen. 
 
All has already happened! 
Live it! 
Don't be ambitious. 
 
Goals make you ambitious, 
and they drive you crazy. 
 
The more goal-oriented a person is, 
the crazier he becomes
-- because ambition is nothing but ego. 
 
You can go on inventing new goals; 
there will always be the horizon beyond. 
 
And with those new goals your ego can go on and on having new trips.
 
 
 
The mystic and the world of the mystic is a totally different dimension. 
 
What I am talking about here has nothing to do with goal orientation 
-- that is the way of the mind. 
 
I am teaching you the way of no-mind.
 
 
 
Digvijay, I know your tremendous interest in the evolutionary process.
 
I am perfectly aware that you have devoted your whole life in that search. 
 
And you will be shocked when you hear me say that you have been wasting your life 
-- wasting because the present is being sacrificed for the future. 
 
And unless you drop this idea of an ultimate goal 
you will never be able to come down 
to the earth, 
to the present, 
to the moment. 
 
And without that there is no meditation, 
and without meditation there is no God.
 
The immediate is the ultimate 
-- I teach you the immediate, 
living moment to moment, 
without carrying the past. 
 
 
 
Buddha says, 
not hoarding the past, 
not accumulating the past; 
 
I would like to add, 
not projecting in the future either. 
 
If the past and the future disappear, 
what is left? 
 
A great silence, a profound presence of something utterly unknown. 
 
A mystery overwhelms you. 
 
And that mystery is immediate. 
 
I will not say "ultimate," 
because 'ultimate' means you can postpone for tomorrow. 
 
'Immediate' shocks you, 
shakes you into awareness right now.
 
A goal is possible if we divide life into means and ends. 
 
That's how it has been down the ages. 
 
 
 
But life is one, 
it cannot be divided. 
 
It is indivisible, whole; 
 
it is an organic unity. 
 
Nothing is a means, 
nothing is an end. 
 
The whole life is one. 
 
You cannot categorize means and ends.
 
 
 
But the moment you think about evolution, goal, 
you have to divide life, 
then something becomes a means 
and something else becomes the end. 
 
 
 
Adolf Hitler believed in evolution, 
hence he could convince the intelligentsia of Germany, 
which is one of the most sophisticated intelligentsia of the world. 
 
In the name of evolution he could preach his Nazi philosophy that superman is the goal, 
that man has to be sacrificed for the superman. 
 
It appealed, it looked logical.
 
Who is the superman? 
 
And who is going to become the superman? 
 
Of course, the Nordics, the Germans. 
It enhanced the German ego tremendously. 
 
"Even if the whole humanity has to be destroyed, 
it is worth destroying 
because the great goal of superhumanity is looming large on the horizon. 
Everything can be sacrificed for it." 
 
That's how he could convince his country to drag the whole world into a world war.
 
 
 
Sri Aurobindo also talks in the same language 
-- the language of evolution. 
 
Not the superman 
but the supermind is the goal. 
 
And you have to sacrifice your present for that supermind; 
again the same idea of sacrifice. 
 
Man has remained dominated by the idea of sacrifice. 
 
Sacrifice! 
Sacrifice! 
Sacrifice! 
 
Be a martyr! 
 
That's the only way to create a golden future.
 
 
 
My effort here is just the opposite. 
 
Avoid Adolf Hitlers and Sri Aurobindos. 
No sacrifice! 
Don't try to be a martyr! 
 
There is no other goal than this moment, 
and existence is as perfect as is ever possible. 
 
Existence is as perfect as it ever will be. 
Existence IS perfection.
 
But because of the idea of a goal, 
we start comparing: 
then man is higher than the monkeys 
and the monkeys are higher than the dogs, 
and so on and so forth. 
 
But who is going to decide? 
 
Have you ever asked the monkeys? 
 
As far as I know, they still laugh at Charles Darwin
because they can't believe this poor man is higher than the monkeys. 
 
Have you ever fought with any monkey? 
 
Fight with a monkey barehanded 
and you will know who is more powerful. 
 
Can you jump like the monkeys on the trees? 
 
And then you will know whose body is more athletic. 
 
Monkeys live on the trees 
and you live on the earth: 
you are the fallen monkeys! 
 
But Charles Darwin never asked the monkeys. 
 
Man himself goes on deciding. 
 
 
 
So if Germans decide then Germans are the highest race, obviously. 
 
And if Indians decide then they are the Aryans, the real Aryans, the pure blood. 
 
And if Jews decide then they are the chosen people of God. 
 
But who is going to decide? 
 
And if man decides then man is higher than all the animals. 
 
 
 
In fact, there is nobody higher and nobody lower. 
 
All these categories are stupid 
-- there is no hierarchy.
 
Existence is absolutely communist. 
 
Everybody is equal, 
participating in the same life, 
breathing the same air
getting warmed by the same sun, 
dancing under the same sky. 
 
Even trees are not lower than you, 
even rocks are not lower than you. 
 
The very language of lower and higher is utterly wrong. 
 
 
 
But the word 'evolution' brings that language in; 
it becomes the "in" thing. 
 
Then you have to make a hierarchy: 
then you are above animals and below angels. 
 
And then the whole journey starts: 
how to go higher and higher and higher? 
 
And there is no roof, 
there is no ceiling; 
you can go on projecting.
 
But if you ask the bees they won't think that you are higher than them. 
 
The intelligentsia of the bees must be watching a thousand 
and one stupidities of human beings 
 
-- because the bees are the most organized phenomenon in existence. 
 
Man and his society must look like chaos compared to the society of the bees. 
 
Everything is so organized 
-- even Adolf Hitler would have felt a little inferior. 
 
And so willingly, so voluntarily
-- the bees are not forced, 
they are not living in a concentration camp. 
 
Willingly, joyously, they are part of an organization, 
so deeply involved with the organization that they have lost their individuality totally; 
 
they live as an organic part, 
they are not separate. 
 
Or if you watch the society of the ants, 
it is fixed, systematic; 
it has a tremendous order.
 
Now, how are you going to decide who is higher? 
 
This chaotic society of man? 
 
In three thousand years man has fought five thousand wars 
-- constantly killing each other, murdering, butchering, 
in the name of politics, 
in the name of religion... 
and this man you think is the highest evolved being on the earth? 
 
There are people like Arthur Koestler who think that something in the very beginning has gone wrong in the human mind, some nuts and bolts are missing 
-- man is born crazy.
 
If you watch man, it appears so. 
 
His whole life seems to be that of violence, struggle, destruction. 
 
No other animal is so destructive. 
 
No other animal kills its own species; 
 
the tigers don't kill other tigers 
and the dogs don't kill other dogs. 
 
Even if they fight, their fights are mock fights; 
they fight only to decide who is powerful. 
 
Once it is decided, the fight stops 
-- because to attack somebody who is weaker than you is not only wrong, 
it is utterly destructive and stupid too.
 
Two dogs will fight: 
they will show their teeth, 
they will bark, 
they will jump at each other, 
but they are simply watching who is more powerful. 
 
Once they have taken note who is more powerful, 
one dog will stop barking, 
will put his tail between his legs, 
and it is finished! 
 
He has given the sign that 
"I am weaker and you are stronger." 
 
And there is no shame, 
he is not ashamed 
-- what can he do if he is weaker and the other is stronger? 
 
How is he responsible for that? 
 
One tree is taller, 
another tree is not taller. 
 
Do you think the rosebushes are feeling ashamed because the mango trees and the neem trees and other trees are going so high? 
 
The roses are not worried at all: 
"So what? You are taller and we are not taller 
-- that's the way you are, this is the way we are."
 
See the sanity of the point: 
except human beings nobody is so insane as to fight with someone who is weaker. 
 
Once it is decided.... 
 
And don't you have even that much consciousness as dogs and tigers have 
-- that they can see, 
it is so apparent that the other is stronger? 
 
Then what is the point of fighting at all? 
 
The game is finished 
-- the other is the winner. 
 
Hence no destruction happens, 
hence no killing happens. 
 
 
 
And animals don't kill even other animals unless they are hungry 
-- except man. 
 
Only man goes for hunting.
 
 
 
And Digvijay is a former prince: 
he must know what hunting is, 
he must have animal heads in his palace, trophies. 
 
The more tigers and lions you have killed, the greater you are. 
 
And for what? 
 
Just to exhibit! 
 
Whenever I have visited the palace of a king, 
I have felt very sorry for the king. 
 
He seems to be utterly insensitive; 
showing these dead heads and dead bodies and skins of animals, 
he thinks he is exhibiting his power, his vitality. 
 
He is simply exhibiting his utter stupidity, inhumanity.
 
 
 
Animals kill only when they are hungry; 
then it can be forgiven. 
 
No animal ever kills without hunger; 
no animal ever kills as a play. 
 
 
 
Killing somebody in a game, 
can you think this hunter is more evolved than other beings? 
 
Just destroying a life for sheer play 
-- and the play is also unjust, 
because you are sitting in a treetop and the animal is on the ground, 
and from high on the top where the animal cannot reach you shoot him. 
 
The animal has no weapons to protect himself, 
and you think you are being very brave? 
 
You are simply showing your cowardliness.
 
 
 
If we look at man it does not appear at all that he is the most evolved animal on the earth 
-- just the opposite. 
 
No other animal goes insane except man. 
 
Yes, a few animals go insane, 
but they only go into insanity when they are put in zoos, 
not in their wild state. 
 
And a zoo is a human phenomenon.
 
 
 
Just think of yourself: 
if the elephants created a zoo 
and put you into a zoo 
-- how long would you remain sane? 
 
It will be impossible for you to remain sane; 
it will be just natural to go insane. 
 
Animals don't become homosexuals 
-- unless they are put in a zoo.
 
In a zoo they turn into homosexuals; 
in a zoo they are bound to 
because they can't get their females. 
 
In a zoo they are confined in such small spaces; 
those small spaces are bound to drive them crazy.
 
You must have seen tigers walking up and down in their cages, 
because they used to live and run for miles. 
 
The whole wild world was theirs, 
and now just a small cage... 
and surrounded by the tourists and the visitors and foolish people looking at them. 
 
Just think of yourself being in a zoo made by the elephants or the tigers or the monkeys, 
and all kinds of monkeys looking at you, 
day in, day out, the whole situation unnatural. 
 
Now scientists say that there is a certain territory that is needed by every animal, a certain space; 
 
if that is not given to that animal it is bound to go insane. 
 
Wild animals need an area of miles and miles to remain free and to remain sane. 
 
Yes, in a zoo they go insane, they go crazy. 
 
They attack even their own species; 
they become destructive. 
 
Even sometimes they have been known to commit suicide, 
but never in their natural state. 
 
It is only man who commits suicide, goes insane, becomes sexually perverted 
-- and still man goes on thinking that he is the highest peak!
 
 
 
As far as I am concerned, 
I don't believe in hierarchy. 
 
The monkey is a monkey, 
the man is a man. 
 
Nobody is higher and nobody is lower. 
 
The rocks are rocks 
and the trees are trees. 
 
And we all participate in one God. 
 
 
 
Yes, there are great changes happening, 
but it is not evolution; 
 
evolution means we are going higher. 
 
Changes are there, certainly; 
life is constantly moving, it is a river. 
 
But change does not mean evolution, remember. 
 
You can change without your being evolving 
-- and that's what is happening.
 
 
 
And that change, constant change, gives you grounds to impose your theory of evolution on it. 
 
Things are changing, life is always in a flux; 
nothing is permanent, all is fluid. 
 
Man has not been like this before, 
and man will never again be like this. 
 
Everything is in a process, 
but the process is not goal-oriented; 
 
it is not moving towards a certain goal. 
 
It is a very playful process.
 
 
 
Children playing, 
you cannot say that they are evolving; 
 
children playing, 
you cannot say they are achieving something. 
 
They are not achieving anything. 
 
That's exactly the concept of LEELA in the East. 
 
Leela means play 
-- the world is God's play, 
 
and in play there is no question of evolution.
 
 
 
The idea of evolution is really Western; 
the East has never believed in evolution. 
 
The East believes in playfulness. 
 
In playfulness there is no evolution at all. 
 
Nothing is means 
and nothing is taken as ends. 
 
It is a dance of energies, 
not moving into any particular direction, 
not meant to achieve something; 
 
the joy is in the play itself, 
the value is intrinsic, not extrinsic. 
 
 
 
When you start thinking of evolution, 
the value is extrinsic; 
the value depends on what you are going to achieve, 
what you are going to become.
 
If a man becomes a great scientist, 
a Nobel Prize winner, he has evolved, 
but the man who remains a woodcutter, he has not evolved. 
 
Why? 
 
What is there so significant in doing mathematics? 
 
And what is there so insignificant in chopping wood? 
 
One likes to chop wood, 
another likes to play with figures, arithmetic, geometry or something else 
-- these are likes, different likes. 
 
One loves to swim, 
somebody else loves to philosophize... 
there is nothing higher and nothing lower.
 
But we have made a society on a hierarchical pattern. 
 
The brahmin is at the top 
-- the brahmin means 
the professor, 
the academician, 
the Nobel Prize winner, 
the famous doctor, 
the famous engineer, 
the scholar. 
 
That is the meaning of the brahmin 
-- he is the highest. 
 
Why? 
 
Why is not the woodcutter the highest? 
 
If the woodcutter enjoys his chopping of wood more than the professor enjoys his teaching, who is higher? 
 
The professor may be simply dragging, repeating every time, every year, the same thing.
 
 
 
I used to know a professor who was repeating the same lectures at least for thirty years. 
 
I had heard it, and his other students had told me that exactly the same lectures, word for word.... 
 
So one day, when the professor was asleep in the afternoon, I went into his house. 
 
I looked into his books, 
found the book in which he had collected all the lectures, and stole it.
 
You cannot believe what happened to the professor! 
 
He didn't turn up the next day. 
 
I inquired after him; he said, 
 
"I am shattered, my life is finished 
-- somebody has stolen my book, 
and I cannot speak without it. 
I have been using the same notes for thirty years! 
Now I cannot make again new notes."
 
I could see the poor man; 
he was just functioning like a gramophone record. 
 
There was no need of him. 
 
I gave him the book and I said, 
 
"Why do you bother to come to the university at all? 
You can simply send this book, one of us can read it, 
and others can take notes. 
 
Why do you bother in your old age to come to the university again and again? 
 
This book will do! 
 
You can die in peace. 
This book is enough. 
 
You don't have to live at all 
-- there is no need."
 
Now, this professor is a brahmin; 
he is the highest 
because the head is thought to be the highest. 
 
It IS on the top, 
maybe that's why the idea has arisen that the head 
and the head people are the topmost people. 
 
The bosses are called "heads" 
and the servants are called "hands"! 
 
Why? 
 
Just because physically the head is on top...?
 
 
 
We have created hierarchy in society. 
 
The lowest are those poor people who are chopping wood or cleaning the roads. 
 
Why are they the lowest?
 
-- because they are doing the most essential things. 
 
The professors can be discarded, 
the society can exist without them; 
 
but the society cannot exist without the street cleaners, the toilet cleaners, the woodchoppers 
-- the society cannot exist without them. 
 
They are far more essential, far more fundamental, 
but they are the lowest.
 
The whole idea is wrong. 
 
There is no hierarchy. 
 
The professor is doing his work, 
and the woodcutter is doing his work, 
and both are needed. 
 
Neither is there a hierarchy between men and other animals, 
nor is there a hierarchy between men and men. 
 
I am against the whole idea of hierarchy.
 
 
 
And that's my vision of a new commune.
 
In the new commune there is going to be 
nobody higher and nobody lower. 
 
In this ashram, there is nobody higher, nobody lower. 
 
There are toilet cleaners and there are professors, therapists, and they are all the same 
-- they are all doing some useful work,
some essential work. 
 
The vice-chancellor here, in this commune, is on the same ground as the woodchopper. 
 
The great therapist has no more prestige, power, than the toilet cleaner. 
 
Hence, there is no problem. 
 
A Ph.D. can choose toilet cleaning 
-- one Ph.D. IS doing that; 
another Ph.D. is just cleaning the streets of the ashram.
 
If there is no hierarchy, 
there is no problem; 
 
otherwise, the Ph.D. will think, 
"How can I do this work, this menial job?
I am not a hand, I am a head." 
 
In this commune there are no heads, no hands 
-- people, whole people, respected, loved, for whatsoever they are doing, 
or whatsoever they can do, 
or whatsoever they LIKE doing.
 
This whole existence is a commune. 
 
God is the center 
and we are all its circumference. 
 
There is no evolution, Digvijay, no ultimate goal. 
 
It is a play. 
 
Enjoy it, 
celebrate it! 
 
If this idea of ultimate goal 
and evolution can drop from your mind, 
I KNOW your potential; 
 
you can become one of the great sannyasins. 
 
You can be a new man. 
 
But you are going crazy because of this idea; 
 
your whole life is being devoted to it. 
 
And if it is fundamentally wrong then you will repent one day. 
 
Forget all about it! 
 
Start meditating more and more about your own inner being. 
 
Don't be worried what is going to happen; 
rather, be involved with what is already happening. 
 
God is a presence, 
God is a being, 
not a becoming, 
and so is this whole existence.
 
The day we drop the idea of evolution and ultimate goal, 
the world will be freed from its bondage of future. 
 
It is the future that is keeping us in a bondage, and the past 
-- and both are in conspiracy against man.
 
Future and past dropped, 
you attain to freedom 
-- freedom, 
Buddha says, which has no bounds.
 
 
 
The second question:
Question 2
BELOVED MASTER,
HOW DO YOU KNOW SO MANY JOKES?
 
 
 
Viramo, 
 
first, 
in none of my past lives have I been an Englishman. 
 
Secondly, 
in many of my past lives I have been a Jew.
 
 
 
Sir Reginald, riding in a New York taxi, was challenged by the driver to solve a riddle: 
 
"This person I am thinking of has the same father that I have and the same mother, 
but it is not my sister 
and it is not my brother. Who is it?"
 
The Britisher thought for a moment, and then gave up. 
 
"It is me," 
 
the cabdriver told him.
 
"By Jove! That's jolly good. 
I must try that on the chaps at my club!"
 
A month later he was sitting in London with his cigar-smoking cronies. He said, 
 
"Gentlemen, this individual I have in mind is not my brother and not my sister, 
yet this person has the same parents as I have -- who is it?"
 
After several thoughtful minutes, 
all the members conceded defeat. 
 
"Who is it?" 
 
one of them inquired. 
 
"Come, Reggie, give us the answer."
 
Reggie slapped his knees in triumph. 
 
"It is a taxicab driver in New York City!" 
 
he roared.
 
 
 
And the second story:
 
Morton and Fogel were discussing humor over lunch. 
 
"Do Jews react differently when they hear a joke?" 
 
asked Morton.
 
"What a question!" 
 
replied Fogel. 
 
"If you tell an Englishman a joke he will laugh at it three times: 
once when you tell it, 
again when you explain it 
and a third time when he understands the point. 
 
Tell a German the same joke: 
he will laugh twice 
-- both times to be polite -- 
there won't be a third time 
because he will never get the point. 
 
Tell the same joke to an American: 
he will laugh once, immediately, 
because he will get it right away. 
 
But," 
 
said Fogel, 
 
"when you tell the joke to a Jew...."
 
"Yes?" 
 
asked Morton.
 
"When you tell the same joke to a Jew, 
he won't laugh at all. 
Instead he will say,
'It is an old joke 
-- and besides, you told it all wrong!'"
 
 
 
The third question:
Question 3
BELOVED MASTER,
I HEARD YOU SAY THAT BEING A SANNYASIN MEANS TO BE READY TO LIVE A VERY LONELY LIFE. 
BUT SINCE I'M A SANNYASIN I FEEL THAT I CAN'T BE LONELY ANYMORE, 
AS YOU ARE ALWAYS AROUND. 
DO I UNDERSTAND YOU WRONG?
 
 
 
Deva Maya, you do not understand me at all. 
 
It is not a question of understanding right or wrong 
-- you don't understand me at all.
 
I have NOT told you that a sannyasin has to be ready to live a lonely life. 
 
 
 
What I had told you was: 
 
a sannyasin knows how to live alone. 
 
And to be lonely is totally different from being alone. 
 
Not only different, they are opposites. 
 
They are as far away from each other as the sky and the earth; 
 
the distance is infinite between them.
 
 
 
To be lonely means a negative state: 
you are hankering for the other, 
you are longing for company, 
you are missing the crowd. 
 
You cannot tolerate yourself; 
you feel yourself intolerable. 
 
You are bored with yourself 
-- that's what being lonely means -- 
utterly bored.
 
 
 
To be alone is totally different: 
it is utterly ecstatic. 
 
To be alone means a positive state. 
 
You are not missing the other, 
you are enjoying yourself. 
 
You are not bored by yourself, 
you are intrigued. 
 
A great challenge comes from your innermost core. 
 
 
 
You start a journey of interiority. 
 
When there are others you are occupied with them, 
your consciousness remains focused on them. 
 
When you are alone, 
your consciousness moves inwards. 
 
When you are with others you have to be an extrovert 
-- your consciousness turning upon itself, 
showering upon itself. 
 
 
 
When you are with others your light shows their faces; 
 
when you are alone your light shows your own original face.
 
 
 
Maya, you have not understood me. 
I had not told you that to be a sannyasin means 
"to be ready to live a very lonely life." 
 
From where did you get this idea of living a very lonely life? 
 
Certainly one has to be able to live alone, 
but to live alone does not mean that you cannot relate; 
 
on the contrary, a man who can live alone 
becomes so full of joy, 
becomes so brimful, 
that he HAS to relate. 
 
He becomes a raincloud 
-- he has to shower. 
 
He becomes a flower so full of fragrance that he has to open its petals 
and allow its fragrance to be released to the winds.
 
A person who knows how to be alone becomes so full of song that he has to sing it. 
 
And where can you sing a song
 
You can sing a song only in love, in relating, in sharing with people. 
 
 
 
But you can share only if you have in the first place.
 
The problem is that people don't have any joy in their being 
and they are bent upon sharing it. 
 
Now, two miserable people bent upon sharing their joys with each other 
-- what is going to happen? 
 
The misery will not be doubled, 
it will be multiplied.
 
That's what people are doing to each other: 
husbands to wives and wives to husbands, 
and parents to children and children to parents, 
and friends to friends. 
 
In fact enemies are not so inimical as friends prove finally: 
torturing each other, 
unloading their miseries on each other, 
throwing their dirt on each other.
 
They are stinking -- what can they do? 
 
When they come close to you, 
you have to suffer their stink. 
 
And you have to suffer if you want them to suffer YOUR stink. 
 
So it is a bargain.
 
You cannot live alone, 
they cannot live alone 
-- you have to be together
 
Even if it stinks, at least there is the consolation that "I am not alone."
 
 
 
A man who knows how to be alone knows how to be meditative. 
 
Aloneness means meditation 
-- just relishing your own being, 
celebrating your own being.
 
 
 
Walt Whitman says:
I celebrate myself, I sing myself. 
 
That is aloneness. 
 
This man Whitman is really a mystic
not just a poet. 
 
He should be counted with the ancient RISHIS of the Upanishads. 
 
America has not given birth to many great mystics; 
Whitman is really one of the most precious gifts of America to the world. 
 
He says: 
I celebrate myself, I sing myself. 
 
That's what a mystic has always been supposed to do, 
that's what a mystic's function is: 
to celebrate himself. 
 
 
 
But how will you celebrate? 
 
You will have to invite others. 
You will have to ask others to come and participate. 
 
Meditation gives you the insight of your own inner treasure, 
and in love you share it. 
 
That's what I mean when I say that a sannyasin has to be ready to be alone 
-- so that one day he can be ready to love. 
 
Only a man who knows the beauties of solitude can love. 
 
 
 
But just a slight difference 
and you can miss the whole point.
 
 
 
Now, the difference between aloneness and loneliness is not much; 
 
as far as language is concerned there is no difference at all, 
they are synonyms. 
 
In the dictionaries you will find aloneness described as loneliness, loneliness as aloneness 
-- but that is only in the dictionaries, 
not in life itself. 
 
In life itself it is totally different.
 
 
 
Don't live through language, 
don't become too much obsessed with language, 
because language is only utilitarian. 
 
It can mislead you -- it misleads. 
 
It can't help it; 
it has been invented by people who know nothing. 
 
I am saying "aloneness" 
and your mind hears "loneliness." 
 
Once you translate aloneness as loneliness you are millions of miles away 
-- not only miles but millions of light-years away from me.
 
 
 
Potter saw a store with a sign reading:
"Hans Schmidt's Chinese Laundry." 
 
Being curious he entered and was greeted by a Chinese who identified himself as Hans Schmidt.
 
"How come you have a name like that?" 
 
asked Potter.
 
"When I land in America I stand in immigration line behind German," 
 
explained the oriental. 
 
"When they ask German his name, he say, 'Hans Schmidt.' 
When official ask me my name I say, 'Sam Ting.'"
 
 
 
It is very easy to understand.
 
P.F.C. Perkins refused to go and fight in Korea. 
He was told that if he would not bear arms, 
the provost marshal would shoot him. 
 
"Are you a conscientious objector?" 
 
asked the first sergeant.
 
"I ain't objectin' to nothin'," 
 
said Perkins, 
 
"but I had the gonorrhea and the diarrhea both, 
and if this 'Korea' is anything like it 
-- go ahead and shoot!"
 
 
 
Maya, I said something, you heard totally something else.
 
 
 
A London chap sees a good-looking girl sitting alone at another table and says, 
 
"Would you care for a cigarette?"
 
She said,
 
"Sorry, I don't smoke."
 
He waited for a few moments and then said, 
 
"Would you care for a drink?"
 
"Sorry, I don't drink."
 
He waited another ten minutes and asked, 
 
"Would you care to have dinner with me?"
 
"I am sorry," 
 
she replied,
 
"I don't eat dinner."
 
"Well, for heaven's sake! 
If you don't smoke or drink or eat dinner, 
what in heaven's name do you do about sex?"
 
"Oh, along about six I have a cup of tea and a biscuit."
 
 
 
You change that word 'loneliness'; 
drop it completely from your mind. 
 
Learn what aloneness is 
-- and aloneness is a beautiful phenomenon, the most beautiful. 
 
Then my presence will not disturb your aloneness, 
my presence will enhance it. 
 
My presence, 
my remembrance, 
feeling me around yourself, 
engulfing you, 
will enhance it, 
will make it richer, 
will make it more crystal-clear. 
 
And not only my presence 
but the presence of my sannyasins will also be absolutely nondisturbing to aloneness.
 
In fact, aloneness cannot be disturbed at all. 
 
It is such a crystallized state of consciousness, 
nothing can distract you away from it, 
and everything helps to make it stronger. 
 
Have you watched this paradoxical phenomenon? 
 
 
 
For example, 
right now we are sitting here in silence... 
the chirping of the birds 
-- is it disturbing the silence or enriching it? 
 
The crow 
-- is he disturbing your silence, or helping and giving it a contrast? 
 
If you are really silent, 
then even in the marketplace you will be surprised that your silence deepens. 
 
If your silence is disturbed by the marketplace, 
that simply means it was not silence in the first place. 
 
It was just forced, cultivated, practiced, plastic 
-- it was not true.
 
If true silence is there, nothing can disturb it. 
 
 
 
Each disturbance comes to enhance it.
 
It is like in a dark night you are walking on a street and a car passes by with full headlights on. 
 
For a moment you are dazed by the light, 
and then the car is gone by. 
 
Do you think the darkness is less than before? 
 
It is deeper than before, 
it is denser than before. 
 
The car and its headlights have not disturbed it at all; 
rather, they helped tremendously.
 
And this is how it is with aloneness: 
your aloneness will not be disturbed by the commune, 
and certainly not by me 
-- because I am not a noise. 
 
I am a melody, a music 
-- a music that cannot be heard by the ears 
but can only be heard by the heart.
 
It is good that you have started feeling me.
 
It is good that you say, 
 
"Since I am a sannyasin I feel that I can't be lonely anymore, 
as You are always around."
 
Yes, you cannot be lonely anymore, 
but you will be more alone now that I am always with you. 
 
And aloneness is a precious treasure, 
the door to the kingdom of God. 
 
But forget that word 'loneliness'; 
it is ugly, it is pathological.
 
And a man who seeks friendship, love, companionship, 
out of loneliness is not going to find it. 
 
In fact, with whomsoever he will associate he will feel cheated 
and he will make the other feel cheated. 
 
He will feel tired and bored, 
and he will make the other feel tired and bored. 
 
He will feel sucked 
and he will make the other feel sucked, 
because both will be sucking on each other's energies. 
 
And they don't have much in the first place. 
 
Their streams are running very thin; 
they are like summer streams in a desertland. 
 
You cannot take any water out of them. 
 
But if you seek friendship and love and companionship out of aloneness, 
you are a flooded river, a river in the rains. 
 
You can share as much as you want. 
 
And the more you share, 
the more you will have.
 
This is the inner economics: 
the more you give, 
the more you get from God. 
 
Once you have known the knack of it you become a spendthrift, 
you are no longer a miser.
 
A spiritual person cannot be a miser, 
and a miser cannot be a spiritual person.
 
 
 
The fourth question:
Question 4
BELOVED MASTER,
WHAT DO YOU HAVE TO SAY ABOUT THE NEW INDIAN GOVERNMENT OF PRIME MINISTER, CHOWDHRY CHARAN SINGH?
 
 
 
Narendra, 
I have nothing to say about such rubbish things, 
but because you have asked, 
just to be polite to you and to your question, 
just to pay my respects for your question,
I will tell you three stories.
 
First:
A man took a cab to the palace of the prime minister where he asked the driver to wait for him.
 
The driver refused saying he did not have time. 
 
"But you will wait for me," 
said the passenger. 
"I am the new prime minister."
 
"In that case," 
replied the driver,
"I will wait -- you won't be in there long!"
 
And the second:
Work schedule of the Indian cabinet:
 
Monday: Conference with leading personalities. 
Tuesday: Formation of new cabinet. 
Wednesday: First meeting of the new cabinet. 
Thursday: First announcements of new cabinet. 
Friday: Withdrawal of announcements. 
Saturday: Resignation of new cabinet.
Sunday: Holiday.
Monday: See above.
 
And the third:
It is an historical fact that Diogenes went all around the known world, lamp in hand, trying to find an honest man.
When he got to New Delhi, 
they stole his lamp.
 
 
 
The fifth question:
Question 5
BELOVED MASTER,
SEX AND DEATH SEEM TO BE THE MAIN ATTRACTIONS FOR ME. 
WHAT CAN YOU SAY ABOUT THESE POLES TO HELP ME GO BEYOND?
 
 
 
Saguna, 
sex and death are really one energy. 
 
Sex is one side of the coin, 
death the other side. 
 
Hence, anybody who is interested in sex is bound to be interested in death 
-- although he would like to avoid it. 
 
Anybody who is interested in death is bound to be interested in sex 
-- although he would like to avoid it. 
 
Why? 
 
-- because the popular conception is that sex and death are opposites. 
 
They are not. 
 
And because of this popular conception there have existed two kinds of cultures in the world: 
 
sex-oriented 
and 
death-oriented.
 
 
 
For example, 
India has remained for centuries a death-oriented culture. 
 
Because it is death-oriented it represses sex. 
 
Thinking that sex is against, 
it represses sex, 
it avoids sex; 
it pretends sex does not exist. 
 
You can talk about death with no problem, 
but you cannot talk about sex.
 
Just the other day a sannyasin had asked, 
 
"I was almost caught and imprisoned by the police 
because I was saying goodbye to my girlfriend 
and we kissed each other before the police station." 
 
It was very difficult to get rid of the police
They caught hold of them; 
they had to wait there for two hours. 
Somehow they persuaded them, apologized.
The sannyasin had asked, 
 
"I am puzzled. 
What wrong had I done there? 
 
I was saying goodbye to my girlfriend, 
she was leaving; 
we may see each other, we may not, 
because who knows about tomorrow? 
 
She will be away for six months, 
and who knows what is going to happen in these six months? 
 
So what was wrong with my kissing the girl and her kissing me, just a goodbye? 
 
Why is it objectionable? 
 
People are pissing on the streets and nobody objects!"
 
Now, that sannyasin does not know that since Morarji Desai became prime minister of this country pissing has become a holy thing. 
 
You can piss anywhere 
-- that is something sacred. 
In fact it is a sacred duty. 
Do as much as you can, 
because it is not pissing: 
it is the water of life. 
You are nourishing the earth; 
you are doing a great public service.
 
 
 
I have heard:
When Morarji Desai went to America, 
he was very much puzzled 
because in the parties, in the gatherings, in meetings, ladies would always keep to the other side of the room. 
 
Finally, he had to ask; 
he was curious why ladies wouldn't come close to him. 
He was informed, 
 
"We are sorry to say, 
but ladies are afraid that you may feel thirsty any time, 
and if you do your thing in public it will be embarrassing. 
So they keep to the other side. 
In case something like that happens, 
they can escape; 
at least they can turn their backs towards you."
 
In India, kissing is something like a sin, a crime. 
 
And in a public place, and that too before a police station! 
 
India is a death-oriented culture. 
 
You can talk about death; 
dead bodies of beggars can lie down by the side of the road and nobody will pay any attention. 
People will go on passing. 
 
It is accepted; 
death is accepted. 
 
In fact, not only accepted, 
but magnified -- to create fear in people so that they become religious.
 
If death is magnified, it really scares you. 
 
And out of fear you can start going to the temple, to the mosque, to the priest, 
because death is coming 
-- sooner or later you will have to die. 
 
Some arrangements have to be made, 
arrangements for that long journey. 
 
Who knows what will be needed? 
 
The priests pretend that they know.
 
And all the so-called saints of India will be talking about death. 
 
They will bring up the subject of death again and again and again. 
 
Their whole business depends on death; 
if people forget about death, 
people start forgetting about God, 
people start forgetting about temples, 
people start forgetting about saints. 
 
So saints cannot leave you alone; 
they will go on bringing the subject of death in your mind so they can go on keeping you trembling. 
 
Your fear is the secret of their trade: 
if you are afraid, 
you will remain slaves to them. 
 
If you become unafraid, 
then you will get out of their folds; 
then you cannot be exploited. 
 
Death is not bad for them, 
it is good. 
It helps their business.
 
 
 
But sex... that is a danger for them. 
 
India is not a sex-oriented country. 
 
Kissing, hugging, love, the very phenomenon of love, 
makes you more earthbound, 
makes you less afraid of death. 
 
Lovers are the people who are the least afraid of death. 
 
When you are in love you don't care about death. 
 
If it comes, it comes. 
 
 
If you are in love, you can die smilingly. 
 
With a kiss on your lips you can say goodbye. 
 
You loved, you lived; 
there is nothing to repent. 
 
Your life has not been a wastage. 
You bloomed! 
You danced in the sun, in the wind, in the rain 
-- what more can you expect? 
 
Immense was the gift of life: 
love was its gift. 
 
You are grateful! 
 
Why should you go to the priest? 
 
You may go to the poet, 
you may go to the painter
you may go to the musician, 
but you will not go to the priest.
 
That's why you will be surprised: 
in my commune you will find musicians 
and you will find poets 
and you will find dancers 
and you will find singers, 
but you will not find any priest at all. 
 
The priest seems to be the center of all religious activity, 
and he is missing here, absolutely missing 
 
-- because my approach is that first 
you have to know what love is, 
you have to go deep into love. 
 
Dive as deep as possible into love!
 
If you can dive really deep into love you will be surprised that you have arrived at death. 
 
That's my own experience 
-- I am not propounding a theory,
I am simply stating my own existential state, 
my own experience.
 
I am only stating a fact: 
if you love deeply you are bound to come to the phenomenon of death. 
 
And when you come through love to death, 
even death is beautiful, 
because love makes everything beautiful. 
 
When you come through love to death, 
love glorifies death, 
love beautifies death; 
even death becomes a blessing. 
 
Those who have known love will know death as the ultimate in orgasm.
 
 
 
Now there are sex-oriented cultures, 
for example, America. 
 
There, death is taboo; 
you should not talk about death. 
 
If you start talking about death, 
people will avoid you. 
 
You will not be invited to parties anymore. 
 
You are not supposed to talk about death; 
death has not to be mentioned. 
 
Death is still one of the unmentionables. 
 
That's why even if somebody dies we have euphemisms, words to cover up the fact of death. 
 
We say, "He has passed away." 
 
We don't say, "He has died." 
 
We say, "He has become God's beloved." 
 
We don't know about God, 
we don't know what it means to become God's beloved, 
because we have never been beloved to anybody. 
 
Even if God wants to hug you, 
the police will catch hold of him. 
 
If he kisses you, even you will feel a little disturbed 
 
-- God? 
and kissing me? 
Is he really a God or just a fraud? 
How can God kiss? 
 
Kissing has never been thought a spiritual activity. 
 
Even in public places it is prohibited, 
and he is doing it on a universal plane
-- not only public but universal, 
at the very center of the cosmos! 
 
But we have these ways of avoiding death; 
it has to be somehow avoided. 
The word itself is taboo.
 
 
 
It is because of Sigmund Freud that the taboo against the word 'sex' was removed 
-- the whole credit goes to this man. 
 
He is one of the greatest benefactors of humanity. 
 
Although he himself was not enlightened, 
he has done a great service, a pioneer work: 
he removed one great taboo. 
 
Now you can talk about sex without feeling ashamed, without feeling guilty.
 
Another Freud is needed
-- a Freud who will remove the taboo against death. 
 
 
 
The West is sex-oriented, 
the East is death-oriented; 
 
hence in the East people are repressive of sex 
and in the West people are repressive of death. 
 
Both are wrong 
because sex and death are two sides of the same coin. 
 
If you repress one, 
you cannot experience the other in its totality, 
because to experience the one in its totality is to experience the other too, 
and both have to be experienced. 
 
Life is an opportunity to experience sex and death. 
 
If you experience these two 
and if you can come to your own authentic experience that they both are one, 
you have transcended. 
 
Knowing that both are one is transcendence. 
 
 
 
Saguna, you ask me, 
 
"What can you say about these poles to help me go beyond?" 
 
Experience both. 
 
But right now death is not there; 
right now you have to experience love, sex 
-- all the delicacies of love, 
intricacies of love, 
complexities of love, 
all the nuances of love. 
 
Right now, go deep into love, Saguna. 
 
And then when death comes 
you will be able to go deep into death too.
 
In fact, while making love, 
at the highest peak of orgasm a small death happens, 
because mind disappears, 
ego disappears, 
time disappears, 
as if the clock suddenly stops. 
 
You are transported into another world. 
You are not a body anymore, 
not a mind anymore, 
not an ego anymore... 
you are pure existence. 
 
That's the beauty of orgasm. 
 
To know orgasm is to experience a little bit of death, a small death.
 
First go deep into love so you can have a few tastes of death. 
 
Then death will come one day 
-- then go dancingly into it, 
because you know it is going to be the greatest orgasm that you have ever known, 
that it is going to be the deepest of love. 
 
And that's how one transcends 
-- knowing that both are one. 
That very knowing is transcendence.
 
 
 
The last question:
Question 6
BELOVED MASTER,
I WANT TO BECOME A SANNYASIN, BUT GRADUALLY. 
IS IT OKAY WITH YOU? 
OR IS A SUDDEN JUMP A NECESSITY?
 
 
 
Girish Chandra, you remind me of a story:
 
During World War I, RAF Captain Bainsby shot down the German ace Baron von Ribstein over English territory. 
 
The next day Bainsby visited the baron in the hospital. 
 
"Old chap," 
 
said the Britisher, 
 
"is there anything I can do for you?"
 
"Yes," 
 
replied Von Ribstein. 
 
"They are amputating my right arm. 
Would you drop it over Germany?" 
 
Captain Bainsby did as he was requested 
and a week later returned for a visit.
 
"My friend,"
 
said the baron,
 
"they are taking off my right leg. 
Would you drop it over the fatherland?"
 
Bainsby fulfilled the request 
and went back to see his air nemesis once again.
 
"Captain," 
 
said Von Ribstein, 
 
"they are going to remove my left leg. 
Once more, can I get you to drop it behind the German lines?"
 
"Of course, old bean," 
 
replied Bainsby. 
 
"But I say, you are not trying to escape, are you?"
 
 
 
Enough for today.
 
 
 
Continue to The Dhammapada: The Way of the Buddha, Vol 3 chapter 7 ‘He is the charioteer’…
 
 
 
from osho talks
 
The Dhammapada: The Way of the Buddha, Vol 3
 
Talks given from 11/08/79 am to 21/08/79 am
English Discourse series
 
chapter 6 : There is no evolution
 
17 August 1979 am in Buddha Hall
 
If you would like to read it in PDF,
there is a free download of this all osho discourses from OSHO RAJNEESH,
please click here.
 
 
 
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about subtle body and chakra
yoga : the alpha and the omega, vol 9 ch1
 
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In this blog, I also shared osho discourse of 
the Tao's 'The secret of the Golden Flower
黄金の華の秘密(太乙金華宗旨)'
and 'The Tao Te Ching 道徳経' by Lao Tzu 老子.
These two show you the way to the enlightenment.
 
If you are interested
please take a look and enjoy!
 
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The secret of the Golden Flower
黄金の華の秘密(太乙金華宗旨)
 
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The Tao Te Ching 
道徳経 by Lao Tzu 老子
 
 
 
beloved osho
beloved gautam buddha 
beloved all enlightened masters
beloved all
 
 
 
”The last word of Buddha was, sammasati. 
Remember that you are a buddha – sammasati.”
 
 
 
sammasati
It means right remembrance.
 
 
 
meditation & love
 
 
 
osho samadhi समाधिः
 
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