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Part IV : Osho’s enlightenment
You ask me: What happened when you became enlightened?
I laughed, a real uproarious laugh, seeing the whole absurdity
of trying to be enlightened. The whole thing is ridiculous because
we are born enlightened, and to try for something that is already
the case is the most absurd thing. If you already have it, you
cannot achieve it; only those things can be achieved which you
don't have, which are not intrinsic parts of your being. But enlightenment
is your very nature.
I had struggled for it for many lives - it had been the
only target for many many lives. And I had done everything that
is possible to do to attain it, but I had always failed. It was
bound to be so - because it cannot be an attainment. It is
your nature, so how can it be your attainment? It cannot be made
an ambition.
Mind is ambitious - ambitious for money, for power, for
prestige. And then one day, when it gets fed up with all these
extrovert activities, it becomes ambitious for enlightenment,
for liberation, for nirvana, for God. But the same ambition has
come back; only the object he changed. First the object was outside,
now the object is inside. But your attitude, your approach has
not changed; you are the same person in the same rut, in the same
routine.
"The day I became enlightened" simply means the day
I realized that there is nothing to achieve, there is nowhere
to go, there is nothing to be done. We are already divine and
we are already perfect - as we are. No improvement is needed,
no improvement at all. God never creates anybody imperfect. Even
if you come across an imperfect man, you will see that his imperfection
is perfect. God never creates any imperfect thing.
I have heard about a Zen Master Bokuju who was telling this
truth to his disciples, that all is perfect. A man stood up - very
old, a hunchback - and he said, "What about me? I am
a hunchback. What do you say about me?" Bokuju said, "I
have never seen such a perfect hunchback in my life."
When I say "the day I achieved enlightenment," I am
using wrong language - because there is no other language,
because our language is created by us. It consists of the words
"achievement," "attainment," "goals,"
"improvement" "progress," "evolution."
Our languages are not created by the enlightened people; and in
fact they cannot create it even if they want to because enlightenment
happens in silence. How can you bring that silence into words?
And whatsoever you do, the words are going to destroy something
of that silence.
Lao Tzu says: The moment truth is asserted it becomes false.
There is no way to communicate truth. But language has to be used;
there is no other way. So we always have to use the language with
the condition that it cannot be adequate to the experience. Hence
I say "the day I achieved my enlightenment." It is neither
an achievement nor mine.
[At this point there is a brief power failure: no light, no
sound.]
Yes, it happens like that! Out of nowhere suddenly the darkness,
suddenly the light, and you cannot do anything. You can just watch.
I laughed that day because of all my stupid ridiculous efforts
to attain it. I laughed on that day at myself, and I laughed on
that day at the whole of humanity, because everybody is trying
to achieve, everybody is trying to reach, everybody is trying
to improve.
To me it happened in a state of total relaxation - it always
happens in that state. I had tried everything. And then, seeing
the futility of all effort, I dropped...I dropped the whole
project, I forgot all about it. For seven days I lived as ordinarily
as possible.
The people I used to live with were very much surprised, because
this was the first time they had seen me live just an ordinary
life. Otherwise my whole life was a perfect discipline.
For two years I had lived with that family, and they had known
that I would get up at three o'clock in the morning, then I would
go for a long four- or five-mile walk or run, and then I would
take a bath in the river. Everything was absolutely routine. Even
if I had a fever or I was ill, there was no difference: I would
simply go on the same way.
They had known me to sit in meditation for hours. Up to that
day I had not eaten many things. I would not drink tea, coffee,
I had a strict discipline about what to eat, what not to eat.
And exactly at nine o'clock I would go to bed. Even if somebody
was sitting there, I would simply say "Goodbye" and
I would go to my bed. The family with whom I used to live, they
would inform the person that "Now you can go. He has gone
to sleep." I would not even waste a single moment in saying,
"Now it is time for me to go to sleep."
When I relaxed for seven days, when I dropped the whole thing
and when on the first day I drank tea in the morning and woke
up at nine o'clock in the morning, the family was puzzled. They
said, "What has happened? Have you fallen?" They used
to think of me as a great yogi.
One picture of those days still exists. I used to use only one
single piece of cloth and that was all. In the day I would cover
my body with it, in the night I would use it as a blanket to cover
myself. I slept on a bamboo mat. That was my whole comfort - that
blanket, that bamboo mat. I had nothing - no other possessions.
They were puzzled when I woke up at nine. They said, "Something
is wrong. Are you very ill, seriously ill?"
I said, "No, I am not seriously ill. I have been ill for
many years, now I am perfectly healthy. Now I will wake up only
when sleep leaves me, and I will go to sleep only when sleep comes
to me. I am no longer going to be a slave to the clock. I will
eat whatsoever my body feels like eating, and I will drink whatsoever
I feel like drinking."
They could not believe it. They said, "Can you even drink
beer?" I said, "Bring it!"
That was the first day I tasted beer. They could not believe their
eyes. They said, "You have completely gone down. You have
become completely unspiritual. What are you doing?"
I said, "Enough is enough." And in seven days I completely
forgot the whole project, and I forgot it forever.
And the seventh day it happened - it happened just out of
nowhere. Suddenly all was light; and I was not doing anything,
I was just sitting under a tree resting, enjoying. And when I
laughed, the gardener heard the laughter. He used to think that
I was a little bit crazy, but he had never seen me laugh in that
way. He came running. He said, "What is the matter?"
I said, "Don't be worried. You know I am crazy - now
I have gone completely crazy! I am laughing at myself. Don't feel
offended. Just go to sleep." theolo09
I am reminded of the fateful day of twenty-first March, 1953.
For many lives I had been working - working upon myself, struggling,
doing whatsoever can be done - and nothing was happening.
Now I understand why nothing was happening. The very effort
was the barrier, the very ladder was preventing, the very urge
to seek was the obstacle. Not that one can reach without seeking.
Seeking is needed, but then comes a point when seeking has to
be dropped. The boat is needed to cross the river but then comes
a moment when you have to get out of the boat and forget all about
it and leave it behind. Effort is needed, without effort nothing
is possible. And also only with effort, nothing is possible.
Just before twenty-first March, 1953, seven days before, I stopped
working on myself. A moment comes when you see the whole futility
of effort. You have done all that you can do and nothing is happening.
You have done all that is humanly possible. Then what else can
you do? In sheer helplessness one drops all search.
And the day the search stopped, the day I was not seeking for
something, the day I was not expecting something to happen, it
started happening. A new energy arose - out of nowhere. It
was not coming from any source. It was coming from nowhere and
everywhere. It was in the trees and in the rocks and the sky and
the sun and the air - it was everywhere. And I was seeking
so hard, and I was thinking it is very far away. And it was so
near and so close.
Just because I was seeking I had become incapable of seeing
the near. Seeking is always for the far, seeking is always for
the distant - and it was not distant. I had become far-sighted,
I had lost the near-sightedness. The eyes had become focussed
on the far away, the horizon, and they had lost the quality to
see that which is just close, surrounding you.
The day effort ceased, I also ceased. Because you cannot exist
without effort, and you cannot exist without desire, and you cannot
exist without striving.
The phenomenon of the ego, of the self, is not a thing, it is
a process. It is not a substance sitting there inside you; you
have to create it each moment. It is like pedalling bicycle. If
you pedal it goes on and on, if you don't pedal it stops. It may
go a little because of the past momentum, but the moment you stop
pedalling, in fact the bicycle starts stopping. It has no more
energy, no more power to go anywhere. It is going to fall and
collapse.
The ego exists because we go on pedalling desire, because we
go on striving to get something, because we go on jumping ahead
of ourselves. That is the very phenomenon of the ego - the
jump ahead of yourself, the jump in the future, the jump in the
tomorrow. The jump in the non-existential creates the ego. Because
it comes out of the non-existential it is like a mirage. It consists
only of desire and nothing else. It consists only of thirst and
nothing else. The ego is not in the present, it is in the future.
If you are in the future, then ego seems to be very substantial.
If you are in the present the ego is a mirage, it starts disappearing.
The day I stopped seeking...and it is not right to say that
I stopped seeking, better will be to say the day seeking stopped.
Let me repeat it: the better way to say it is the day the seeking
stopped. Because if I stop it then I am there again. Now stopping
becomes my effort, now stopping becomes my desire, and desire
goes on existing in a very subtle way.
You cannot stop desire; you can only understand it. In the very
understanding is the stopping of it. Remember, nobody can stop
desiring, and the reality happens only when desire stops.
So this is the dilemma. What to do? Desire is there and Buddhas
go on saying desire has to be stopped, and they go on saying in
the next breath that you cannot stop desire. So what to do? You
put people in a dilemma. They are in desire, certainly. You say
it has to be stopped - okay. And then you say it cannot be
stopped. Then what is to be done?
The desire has to be understood. You can understand it, you
can just see the futility of it. A direct perception is needed,
an immediate penetration is needed. Look into desire, just see
what it is, and you will see the falsity of it, and you will see
it is non-existential. And desire drops and something drops simultaneously
within you.
Desire and the ego exist in cooperation, they coordinate. The
ego cannot exist without desire, the desire cannot exist without
the ego. Desire is projected ego, ego is introjected desire. They
are together, two aspects of one phenomenon.
The day desiring stopped, I felt very hopeless and helpless.
No hope because no future. Nothing to hope because all hoping
has proved futile, it leads nowhere. You go in rounds. It goes
on dangling in front of you, it goes on creating new mirages,
it goes on calling you, 'Come on, run fast, you will reach.' But
howsoever fast you run you never reach.
That's why Buddha calls it a mirage. It is like the horizon
that you see around the earth. It appears but it is not there.
If you go it goes on running from you. The faster you run, the
faster it moves away. The slower you go, the slower it moves away.
But one thing is certain - the distance between you and the
horizon remains absolutely the same. Not even a single inch can
you reduce the distance between you and the horizon.
You cannot reduce the distance between you and your hope. Hope
is horizon. You try to bridge yourself with the horizon, with
the hope, with a projected desire. The desire is a bridge, a dream
bridge - because the horizon exists not, so you cannot make
a bridge towards it, you can only dream about the bridge. You
cannot be joined with the non-existential.
The day the desire stopped, the day I looked and realized into
it, it simply was futile. I was helpless and hopeless. But that
very moment something started happening. The same started happening
for which for many lives I was working and it was not happening.
In your hopelessness is the only hope, and in your desirelessness
is your only fulfillment, and in your tremendous helplessness
suddenly the whole existence starts helping you.
It is waiting. When it sees that you are working on your own,
it does not interfere. It waits. It can wait infinitely because
there is no hurry for it. It is eternity. The moment you are not
on your own, the moment you drop, the moment you disappear, the
whole existence rushes towards you, enters you. And for the first
time things start happening.
Seven days I lived in a very hopeless and helpless state, but
at the same time something was arising. When I say hopeless I
don't mean what you mean by the word hopeless. I simply mean there
was no hope in me. Hope was absent. I am not saying that I was
hopeless and sad. I was happy in fact, I was very tranquil, calm
and collected and centered. Hopeless, but in a totally new meaning.
There was no hope, so how could there be hopelessness. Both had
disappeared.
The hopelessness was absolute and total. Hope had disappeared
and with it its counterpart, hopelessness, had also disappeared.
It was a totally new experience - of being without hope. It
was not a negative state. I have to use words - but it was
not a negative state. It was absolutely positive. It was not just
absence, a presence was felt. Something was overflowing in me,
overflooding me.
And when I say I was helpless, I don't mean the word in the
dictionary-sense. I simply say I was selfless. That's what I mean
when I say helpless. I have recognized the fact that I am not,
so I cannot depend on myself, so I cannot stand on my own ground - there
was no ground underneath. I was in an abyss...bottomless abyss.
But there was no fear because there was nothing to protect. There
was no fear because there was nobody to be afraid.
Those seven days were of tremendous transformation, total transformation.
And the last day the presence of a totally new energy, a new light
and new delight, became so intense that it was almost unbearable - as
if I was exploding, as if I was going mad with blissfulness. The
new generation in the West has the right word for it - I was
blissed out, stoned.
It was impossible to make any sense out of it, what was happening.
It was a very non-sense world - difficult to figure it out,
difficult to manage in categories, difficult to use words, languages,
explanations. All scriptures appeared dead and all the words that
have been used for this experience looked very pale, anaemic.
This was so alive. It was like a tidal wave of bliss.
The whole day was strange, stunning, and it was a shattering
experience. The past was disappearing, as if it had never belonged
to me, as if I had read about it somewhere, as if I had dreamed
about it, as if it was somebody else's story I have heard and
somebody told it to me. I was becoming loose from my past, I was
being uprooted from my history, I was losing my autobiography.
I was becoming a non-being, what Buddha calls anatta. Boundaries
were disappearing, distinctions were disappearing.
Mind was disappearing; it was millions of miles away. It was
difficult to catch hold of it, it was rushing farther and farther
away, and there was no urge to keep it close. I was simply indifferent
about it all. It was okay. There was no urge to remain continuous
with the past.
By the evening it became so difficult to bear it - it was
hurting, it was painful. It was like when a woman goes into labour
when a child is to be born, and the woman suffers tremendous pain - the
birth pangs.
I used to go to sleep in those days near about twelve or one
in the night, but that day it was impossible to remain awake.
My eyes were closing, it was difficult to keep them open. Something
was very imminent, something was going to happen. It was difficult
to say what it was - maybe it is going to be my death - but
there was no fear. I was ready for it. Those seven days had been
so beautiful that I was ready to die, nothing more was needed.
They had been so tremendously blissful, I was so contented, that
if death was coming, it was welcome.
But something was going to happen - something like death,
something very drastic, something which will be either a death
or a new birth, a crucifixion or a resurrection - but something
of tremendous import was around just by the corner. And it was
impossible to keep my eyes open. I was drugged.
I went to sleep near about eight. It was not like sleep. Now
I can understand what Patanjali means when he says that sleep
and samadhi are similar. Only with one difference - that in
samadhi you are fully awake and asleep also. Asleep and awake
together, the whole body relaxed, every cell of the body totally
relaxed, all functioning relaxed, and yet a light of awareness
burns within you...clear, smokeless. You remain alert and
yet relaxed, loose but fully awake. The body is in the deepest
sleep possible and your consciousness is at its peak. The peak
of consciousness and the valley of the body meet.
I went to sleep. It was a very strange sleep. The body was asleep,
I was awake. It was so strange - as if one was torn apart
into two directions, two dimensions; as if the polarity has become
completely focused, as if I was both the polarities together...the
positive and negative were meeting, sleep and awareness were meeting,
death and life were meeting. That is the moment when you can say
'the creator and the creation meet.'
It was weird. For the first time it shocks you to the very roots,
it shakes your foundations. You can never be the same after that
experience; it brings a new vision to your life, a new quality.
Near about twelve my eyes suddenly opened - I had not opened
them. The sleep was broken by something else. I felt a great presence
around me in the room. It was a very small room. I felt a throbbing
life all around me, a great vibration - almost like a hurricane,
a great storm of light, joy, ecstasy. I was drowning in it.
It was so tremendously real that everything became unreal. The
walls of the room became unreal, the house became unreal, my own
body became unreal. Everything was unreal because now there was
for the first time reality.
That's why when Buddha and Shankara say the world is maya, a
mirage, it is difficult for us to understand. Because we know
only this world, we don't have any comparison. This is the only
reality we know. What are these people talking about - this
is maya, illusion? This is the only reality. Unless you come to
know the really real, their words cannot be understood, their
words remain theoretical. They look like hypotheses. Maybe this
man is propounding a philosophy - 'The world is unreal'.
When Berkley in the West said that the world is unreal, he was
walking with one of his friends, a very logical man; the friend
was almost a skeptic. He took a stone from the road and hit Berkley's
feet hard. Berkley screamed, blood rushed out, and the skeptic
said, 'Now, the world is unreal? You say the world is unreal? - then
why did you scream? This stone is unreal? - then why did you
scream? Then why are you holding your leg and why are you showing
so much pain and anguish on your face. Stop this? It is all unreal.
Now this type of man cannot understand what Buddha means when
he says the world is a mirage. He does not mean that you can pass
through the wall. He is not saying this - that you can eat
stones and it will make no difference whether you eat bread or
stones. He is not saying that.
He is saying that there is a reality. Once you come to know
it, this so-called reality simply pales out, simply becomes unreal.
With a higher reality in vision the comparison arises, not otherwise.
In the dream; the dream is real. You dream every night. Dream
is one of the greatest activities that you go on doing. If you
live sixty years, twenty years you will sleep and almost ten years
you will dream. Ten years in a life - nothing else do you
do so much. Ten years of continuous dreaming - just think
about it. And every night.... And every morning you say it
was unreal, and again in the night when you dream, dream becomes
real.
In a dream it is so difficult to remember that this is a dream.
But in the morning it is so easy. What happens? You are the same
person. In the dream there is only one reality. How to compare?
How to say it is unreal? Compared to what? It is the only reality.
Everything is as unreal as everything else so there is no comparison.
In the morning when you open your eyes another reality is there.
Now you can say it was all unreal. Compared to this reality, dream
becomes unreal.
There is an awakening - compared to that reality of that
awakening, this whole reality becomes unreal.
That night for the first time I understood the meaning of the
word maya. Not that I had not known the word before, not that
I was not aware of the meaning of the word. As you are aware,
I was also aware of the meaning - but I had never understood
it before. How can you understand without experience?
That night another reality opened its door, another dimension
became available. Suddenly it was there, the other reality, the
separate reality, the really real, or whatsoever you want to call
it - call it god, call it truth, call it dhamma, call it tao,
or whatsoever you will. It was nameless. But it was there - so
opaque, so transparent, and yet so solid one could have touched
it. It was almost suffocating me in that room. It was too much
and I was not yet capable of absorbing it.
A deep urge arose in me to rush out of the room, to go under
the sky - it was suffocating me. It was too much! It will
kill me! If I had remained a few moments more, it would have suffocated
me - it looked like that.
I rushed out of the room, came out in the street. A great urge
was there just to be under the sky with the stars, with the trees,
with the earth...to be with nature. And immediately as I came
out, the feeling of being suffocated disappeared. It was too small
a place for such a big phenomenon. Even the sky is a small place
for that big phenomenon. It is bigger than the sky. Even the sky
is not the limit for it. But then I felt more at ease.
I walked towards the nearest garden. It was a totally new walk,
as if gravitation had disappeared. I was walking, or I was running,
or I was simply flying; it was difficult to decide. There was
no gravitation, I was feeling weightless - as if some energy
was taking me. I was in the hands of some other energy.
For the first time I was not alone, for the first time I was no
more an individual, for the first time the drop has come and fallen
into the ocean. Now the whole ocean was mine, I was the ocean.
There was no limitation. A tremendous power arose as if I could
do anything whatsoever. I was not there, only the power was there.
I reached to the garden where I used to go every day. The garden
was closed, closed for the night. It was too late, it was almost
one o'clock in the night. The gardeners were fast asleep. I had
to enter the garden like a thief, I had to climb the gate. But
something was pulling me towards the garden. It was not within
my capacity to prevent myself. I was just floating.
That's what I mean when I say again and again 'float with the
river, don't push the river'. I was relaxed, I was in a let-go.
I was not there. it was there, call it god - god was there.
I would like to call it it, because god is too human a word,
and has become too dirty by too much use, has become too polluted
by so many people. Christians, Hindus, Mohammedans, priests and
politicians - they all have corrupted the beauty of the word.
So let me call it it. It was there and I was just carried away...carried
by a tidal wave.
The moment I entered the garden everything became luminous,
it was all over the place - the benediction, the blessedness.
I could see the trees for the first time - their green, their
life, their very sap running. The whole garden was asleep, the
trees were asleep. But I could see the whole garden alive, even
the small grass leaves were so beautiful.
I looked around. One tree was tremendously luminous - the
maulshree tree. It attracted me, it pulled me towards itself.
I had not chosen it, god himself has chosen it. I went to the
tree, I sat under the tree. As I sat there things started settling.
The whole universe became a benediction.
It is difficult to say how long I was in that state. When I
went back home it was four o'clock in the morning, so I must have
been there by clock time at least three hours - but it was
infinity. It had nothing to do with clock time. It was timeless.
Those three hours became the whole eternity, endless eternity.
There was no time, there was no passage of time; it was the virgin
reality - uncorrupted, untouchable, unmeasurable.
And that day something happened that has continued - not
as a continuity - but it has still continued as an undercurrent.
Not as a permanency - each moment it has been happening again
and again. It has been a miracle each moment.
That night...and since that night I have never been in the
body. I am hovering around it. I became tremendously powerful
and at the same time very fragile. I became very strong, but that
strength is not the strength of a Mohammed Ali. That strength
is not the strength of a rock, that strength is the strength of
a rose flower - so fragile in his strength...so fragile,
so sensitive, so delicate.
The rock will be there, the flower can go any moment, but still
the flower is stronger than the rock because it is more alive.
Or, the strength of a dewdrop on a leaf of grass just shining;
in the morning sun - so beautiful, so precious, and yet can
slip any moment. So incomparable in its grace, but a small breeze
can come and the dewdrop can slip and be lost forever.
Buddhas have a strength which is not of this world. Their strength
is totally of love...Like a rose flower or a dewdrop. Their
strength is very fragile, vulnerable. Their strength is the strength
of life not of death. Their power is not of that which kills;
their power is of that which creates. Their power is not of violence,
aggression; their power is that of compassion.
But I have never been in the body again, I am just hovering
around the body. And that's why I say it has been a tremendous
miracle. Each moment I am surprised I am still here, I should
not be. I should have left any moment, still I am here. Every
morning I open my eyes and I say, 'So, again I am still here?'
Because it seems almost impossible. The miracle has been a continuity.
Just the other day somebody asked a question - 'Osho, you
are getting so fragile and delicate and so sensitive to the smells
of hair oils and shampoos that it seems we will not be able to
see you unless we all go bald.' By the way, nothing is wrong with
being bald - bald is beautiful. Just as 'black is beautiful',
so 'bald is beautiful'. But that is true and you have to be careful
about it.
I am fragile, delicate and sensitive. That is my strength. If
you throw a rock at a flower nothing will happen to the rock,
the flower will be gone. But still you cannot say that the rock
is more powerful than the flower. The flower will be gone because
the flower was alive. And the rock - nothing will happen to
it because it is dead. The flower will be gone because the flower
has no strength to destroy. The flower will simply disappear and
give way to the rock. The rock has a power to destroy because
the rock is dead.
Remember, since that day I have never been in the body really;
just a delicate thread joins me with the body. And I am continuously
surprised that somehow the whole must be willing me to be here,
because I am no more here with my own strength, I am no more here
on my own. It must be the will of the whole to keep me here, to
allow me to linger a little more on this shore. Maybe the whole
wants to share something with you through me.
Since that day the world is unreal. Another world has been revealed.
When I say the world is unreal I don't mean that these trees are
unreal. These trees are absolutely real - but the way you
see these trees is unreal. These trees are not unreal in themselves - they
exist in god, they exist in absolute reality - but the way
you see them you never see them; you are seeing something else,
a mirage.
You create your own dream around you and unless you become awake
you will continue to dream. The world is unreal because the world
that you know is the world of your dreams. When dreams drop and
you simply encounter the world that is there, then the real world.
There are not two things, god and the world. God is the world
if you have eyes, clear eyes, without any dreams, without any
dust of the dreams, without any haze of sleep; if you have clear
eyes, clarity, perceptiveness, there is only god.
Then somewhere god is a green tree, and somewhere else god is
a shining star, and somewhere else god is a cuckoo, and somewhere
else god is a flower, and somewhere else a child and somewhere
else a river - then only god is. The moment you start seeing,
only god is.
But right now whatsoever you see is not the truth, it is a projected
lie. That is the meaning of a mirage. And once you see, even for
a single split moment, if you can see, if you can allow yourself
to see, you will find immense benediction present all over, everywhere - in
the clouds, in the sun, on the earth.
This is a beautiful world. But I am not talking about your world,
I am talking about my world. Your world is very ugly, your world
is your world created by a self, your world is a projected world.
You are using the real world as a screen and projecting your own
ideas on it.
When I say the world is real, the world is tremendously beautiful,
the world is luminous with infinity, the world is light and delight,
it is a celebration, I mean my world - or your world if you
drop your dreams.
When you drop your dreams you see the same world as any Buddha
has ever seen. When you dream you dream privately. Have you watched
it? - that dreams are private. You cannot share them even
with your beloved. You cannot invite your wife to your dream - or
your husband, or your friend. You cannot say, 'Now, please come
tonight in my dream. I would like to see the dream together.'
It is not possible. Dream is a private thing, hence it is illusory,
it has no objective reality.
God is a universal thing. Once you come out of your private
dreams, it is there. It has been always there. Once your eyes
are clear, a sudden illumination - suddenly you are overflooded
with beauty, grandeur and grace. That is the goal, that is the
destiny.
Let me repeat. Without effort you will never reach it, with
effort nobody has ever reached it. You will need great effort,
and only then there comes a moment when effort becomes futile.
But it becomes futile only when you have come to the very peak
of it, never before it. When you have come to the very pinnacle
of your effort - all that you can do you have done - then
suddenly there is no need to do anything any more. You drop the
effort.
But nobody can drop it in the middle, it can be dropped only
at the extreme end. So go to the extreme end if you want to drop
it. Hence I go on insisting: make as much effort as you can, put
your whole energy and total heart in it, so that one day you can
see - now effort is not going to lead me anywhere. And that
day it will not be you who will drop the effort, it drops on its
own accord. And when it drops on its own accord, meditation happens.
Meditation is not a result of your efforts, meditation is a happening.
When your efforts drop, suddenly meditation is there...the
benediction of it, the blessedness of it, the glory of it. It
is there like a presence...luminous, surrounding you and surrounding
everything. It fills the whole earth and the whole sky.
That meditation cannot be created by human effort. Human effort
is too limited. That blessedness is so infinite. You cannot manipulate
it. It can happen only when you are in a tremendous surrender.
When you are not there only then it can happen. When you are a
no-self - no desire, not going anywhere - when you are
just herenow, not doing anything in particular, just being, it
happens. And it comes in waves and the waves become tidal. It
comes like a storm, and takes you away into a totally new reality.
But first you have to do all that you can do, and then you have
to learn non-doing. The doing of the non-doing is the greatest
doing, and the effort of effortlessness is the greatest effort.
Your meditation that you create by chanting a mantra or by sitting
quiet and still and forcing yourself, is a very mediocre meditation.
It is created by you, it cannot be bigger than you. It is homemade,
and the maker is always bigger than the made. You have made it
by sitting, forcing in a yoga posture, chanting 'rama, rama, rama'
or anything - 'blah, blah, blah' - anything. You have
forced the mind to become still.
It is a forced stillness. It is not that quiet that comes when
you are not there. It is not that silence which comes when you
are almost non-existential. It is not that beautitude which descends
on you like a dove.
It is said when Jesus was baptized by John the Baptist in the
Jordan River, god descended in him, or the holy ghost descended
in him like a dove. Yes, that is exactly so. When you are not
there peace descends in you...fluttering like a dove...reaches
in your heart and abides there and abides there forever.
You are your undoing, you are the barrier. Meditation is when
the meditator is not. When the mind ceases with all its activities - seeing
that they are futile - then the unknown penetrates you, overwhelms
you.
The mind must cease for god to be. Knowledge must cease for
knowing to be. You must disappear, you must give way. You must
become empty, then only you can be full.
That night I became empty and became full. I became non-existential
and became existence. That night I died and was reborn. But the
one that was reborn has nothing to do with that which died, it
is a discontinuous thing. On the surface it looks continuous but
it is discontinuous. The one who died, died totally; nothing of
him has remained.
Believe me, nothing of him has remained, not even a shadow.
It died totally, utterly. It is not that I am just a modified
rup, transformed, modified form, transformed form of the old.
No, there has been no continuity. That day of March twenty-first,
the person who had lived for many many lives, for millennia, simply
died. Another being, absolutely new, not connected at all with
the old, started to exist.
Religion just gives you a total death. Maybe that's why the
whole day previous to that happening I was feeling some urgency
like death, as if I am going to die - and I really died. I
have known many other deaths but they were nothing compared to
it, they were partial deaths.
Sometimes the body died, sometimes a part of the mind died,
sometimes a part of the ego died, but as far as the person was
concerned, it remained. Renovated many times, decorated many times,
changed a little bit here and there, but it remained, the continuity
remained.
That night the death was total. It was a date with death and god
simultaneously. trans211
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