PATANJALI YOGA SUTRAS - RIGHT AND WRONG KNOWLEDGE
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RIGHT KNOWLEDGE HAS THREE
SOURCES: DIRECT COGNITION, INFERENCE AND THE WORDS OF THE AWAKENED ONES.
WRONG KNOWLEDGE IS A FALSE CONCEPTION NOT CORRESPONDING TO THE THING AS IT IS.
AN IMAGE CONJURED UP BY WORDS WITHOUT ANY SUBSTANCE BEHIND IT IS VIKALPA --
IMAGINATION.
THE MODIFICATION OF THE MIND WHICH IS BASED ON THE ABSENCE OF ANY CONTENT IN IT
IS SLEEP.
MEMORY IS THE CALLING UP OF PAST EXPERIENCES.
The first sutra:
RIGHT KNOWLEDGE HAS THREE SOURCES: DIRECT
COGNITION, INFERENCE AND THE WORDS OF THE AWAKENED ONES.
Pratyaksha, direct cognition, is the first source of right knowledge. Direct
cognition means a face-to-face encounter without any mediator, without any
medium, without any agent. When you know directly something, the knower faces
the known immediately There is no one to relate it, no bridge. Then it is right
knowledge. But then many problems arise.
Ordinarily, pratyaksha, direct cognition, has been translated, interpreted,
commented, in a very wrong way. The very word pratyaksha means before the eyes,
in front of the eyes. But eyes themselves are a mediation, the knower is hidden
behind. Eyes are the mediums. You are hearing me, but this is not direct; this
is not immediate. You are hearing me through the senses, through the ears. You
are seeing me through the eyes.
Your eyes can wrongly report to you; your ears can wrongly report. No one
should be believed; no mediator should be believed, because you cannot rely on
the mediator. If your eyes are ill, they will report differently; if your eyes
are drugged, they will report differently; if your eyes are filled with memory,
they will report differently.
If you are in love, then you see something else. If you are not in love then
you can never see that. An ordinary woman can become the most beautiful person
in the world if you see through love. When your eyes are filled with love, then
they report something else. And the same person can appear the ugliest if your
eyes are filled with hate. They are not reliable.
You hear through the ears. Ears are just instruments, they can function
wrongly; they can hear something which has not been said; they can miss
something which was being said. Senses cannot be reliable; senses are just
mechanical devices.
Then what is pratyaksha? Then what is direct cognition? Direct cognition can
only be when there is no mediator, not even senses. Patanjali says then it is
right knowledge. This is the first basic source of right knowledge: when you
know something and you need not depend on anybody else.
Only in deep meditation you transcend senses. Then direct cognition becomes
possible. When Buddha comes to know his innermost being, that innermost being is
pratyaksha; that is direct cognition. No senses are involved; nobody has
reported it; there is no one like an agent. The knower and known are face to
face. There is nothing in between. This is immediacy, and immediacy can only be
true.
So the first right knowledge can only be that of the inner self. You may know
the whole world, but if you have not known the innermost core of your being your
whole knowledge is absurd it is not really knowledge; it cannot be true, because
the first, basic right knowledge has not happened to you. Your whole edifice is
false. You may know many things. If you have not known yourself, all your
knowledge is based on reports, reports given by the senses. But how can you be
certain that senses are reporting rightly?
In the night you dream. While dreaming you start believing in the dream, that
it is true. Your senses are reporting the dream -- your eyes are seeing it, your
ears are hearing it, you may be touching it. Your senses are reporting to you;
that's why you fall under the illusion that it is real. Here you are; it may be
just a dream. How can you be certain that I am speaking to you in reality? It is
possible it may be just a dream, you are dreaming me. Every dream is true while
you dream.
Chuang Tzu once saw a dream that he has become a butterfly. And in the morning
he was sad. And his disciples asked, "Why are you so sad?" Chuang Tzu said, "I
am in trouble. In such a trouble I have never been before. This puzzle seems to
be impossible; it cannot be solved. Last night I saw a dream that I have become
a butterfly!"
The disciples laughed. They said, "What is there? This is not a riddle. A dream
is just a dream." Chuang Tzu says, "But listen. I am troubled. If Chuang Tzu can
dream that he has become a butterfly, a butterfly may be dreaming now that she
has become Chuang Tzu. So how to decide whether I am now facing reality or again
a dream? And if Chuang Tzu can become a butterfly, why can't a butterfly dream
that she has become a Chuang Tzu?"
There is no impossibility; the reverse can occur. You cannot rely on the
senses. In the dream they deceive you. If you take a drug, LSD or something,
your senses start deceiving you; you start seeing things which are not there.
They can deceive you to such an extent that you can start believing things so
absolutely, that you may be in danger.
One girl jumped in New York from sixtieth floor because under LSD she thought
now she can fly. Chuang Tzu was not wrong: the girl really flew out of the
window. Of course, she died. But she will never be able to know that she has
been deceived by her senses under the influence of the drug.
Even without drugs we have illusions. You are passing through a dark street,
and suddenly you get scared -- a snake is there. You start running, and later
on you come to know that there was no snake, just a rope was Lying there. But
when you felt that there was a snake, there was a snake. Your eyes were
reporting that the snake is there and you behaved accordingly-you escaped from
the place.
Senses cannot be believed. Then what is direct cognition? Direct cognition is
something which is known without senses. So the first right knowledge can only
be of the inner self because only there senses will not be needed. Everywhere
else senses will be needed. If you want to see me you will have to see through
the eyes, but if you want to see yourself, eyes are not needed. Even a blind man
can see himself. If you want to see me light will be needed, but if you want to
see yourself darkness is okay, light is not needed.
Even in the darkest cave you can know yourself. No medium -- light, eyes,
anything -- is needed. The inner experience is immediate, and that immediate
experience is the basis of all right knowledge.
Once you are rooted in that inner experience then many things will start
happening to you. It will not be possible to understand them right now. One is
rooted in his center, in his inner being, one has come to feel it as a direct
experience, then senses cannot deceive him. He is awakened. Then eyes cannot
deceive, then his ears cannot deceive, then nothing can deceive. Deception has
dropped.
You can be deceived because you are living in delusion; you cannot be deceived
once you have come to be a right knower. You cannot be deceived! Then everything
by and by takes the shape of right knowledge. Once you know yourself, then
whatsoever you know will fall automatically to be right because you are right
now. This is the distinction to be remembered: if you are right, then everything
becomes right; if you are wrong, then everything goes wrong. So it is not a
question of doing something outside, it is a question of doing something inside.
You cannot deceive a Buddha -- it is impossible. How can you deceive a Buddha?
He is rooted in himself. You are transparent to him; you cannot deceive. Before
you know, he knows you. Even a glimmer of thought in you is clearly seen by him.
He penetrates you to your very being.
Your penetration goes to the same extent in others as it goes into yourself. If
you can penetrate into yourself, to the same extent you can penetrate into
everything. Deeper you move within, deeper you can move without. And you have
not moved within even a single inch, so whatsoever you do outside is just like a
dream.
Patanjali says the first source of right knowledge is immediate, direct
cognition pratyaksha. He is not concerned with charvakas, old materialists, who
said that pratyaksha, that which is before the eyes, is only true.
Because of this word pratyaksha, direct cognition, much misunderstanding has
happened. The Indian school of materialists is charvaka. The source of Indian
materialism was Brihaspati, a very penetrating thinker, but a thinker; a very
profound philosopher, but a philosopher -- not a realized soul. He says only
pratyaksha is true, and by pratyaksha he means whatsoever you know is true --
through the senses. And he says there is no way of knowing anything without the
senses, so only sense knowledge is real for charvakas.
Hence, he denies there can be any God because no one has ever seen him. And
that which can be seen can only be real; that which cannot be seen cannot be
real. God is not because you cannot see; the soul is not because you cannot see.
And he says, "If there is God, bring him before me so I can see. If I see then
he is, because only seeing is truth."
He also uses the word pratyaksha, direct cognition, but his meaning is totally
different. When Patanjali uses the word pratyaksha, his meaning is on an
altogether different level. He says knowledge not derived from any instrument,
not derived from any medium, immediate, is true. And once this knowledge
happens, you have become true. And now nothing false can happen to you. When you
are true, authentically rooted in truth, then illusions become impossible.
That's why it is said Buddhas never dream; one who is awakened never dreams.
Because even dream cannot happen to him; he cannot be deceived. He sleeps, but
not like you. He sleeps in a totally different way the quality is different.
Only his body sleeps, relaxes. His being remains alert.
And that alertness won't allow any dream to happen. You can dream only when
alertness is lost. When you are not aware, when you are deeply hypnotized, then
you start dreaming. Dream can happen only when you are completely unaware. More
unawareness, more dreams will be there. More awareness, less dreams. Fully
aware, no dream. Even dreaming becomes impossible for one who is rooted in
himself, who has come to know the inner being immediately.
This is the first source of right knowledge. Second source is inference. That
is secondary, but that too is worth consideration because, as you are right now,
you don't know whether there is a self within or not. You have no direct
knowledge of your inner being. What to do? There are two possibilities. You can
simply deny that there is no inner core of your being, there is no soul, like
charvakas do or in the West, Epicurus, Marx Engels and others have done.
But Patanjali says that if you know, there is no need for inference, but if you
don't know then too it will be helpful to infer. For example, Descartes, one of
the greatest thinkers of the West, started his philosophical quest through
doubt. He took the standpoint from the very beginning that he will not believe
in anything which is not indubitable. That which can be doubted, he will doubt.
And he will try to find out a point which can not be doubted, and only on that
point he will create the whole edifice of his thinking. A beautiful quest --
honest, arduous, dangerous.
So he denied God because you can doubt. Many have doubted, and no one has been
able to answer their doubts. He went on denying. Whatsoever could be doubted,
conceived to be dubitable, he denied. For years continuously he was in inner
turmoil. Then he fell upon the point which was indubitable: he couldn't deny
himself; that was impossible. You cannot say, "I am not." If you say it, your
very saying proves that you are. So this was the basic rock -- that "I cannot
deny myself; I cannot say I am not. Who will say it? Even to doubt, I am
needed."
This is inference. This is not direct cognition. This is through logic and
argument, but it gives a shadow, it gives a glimpse, it gives you a possibility,
an opening. And then Descartes had the rock, and on this rock a great temple can
be built. One indubitable fact, and you can reach to the absolute truth. If you
start with a doubtful thing, you will never reach anywhere. In the very base,
doubt remains.
Patanjali says inference is the second source of right knowledge. Right logic,
right doubting, right argument can give you something which can help towards
real knowledge. That he calls inference, anuman. Directly you have not seen, but
everything proves it; it must be so. Situational proofs are there that it must
be so.
For example, you look around the vast universe. You may not be able to conceive
there is a God, but you cannot deny -- even through simple inference you cannot
deny -- that the whole world is a system, a coherent whole, a design. That
cannot be denied. The design is so apparent, even science cannot deny. Rather,
on the contrary, science goes on finding more and more designs, more and more
laws.
If the world is just an accident, then science is impossible. But the world
doesn't seem to be an accident, it seems to be planned, and it is running
according to certain laws, and those laws are never broken.
Patanjali will say that design in the universe cannot be denied, and if once
you feel there is a design, the designer has entered. But that is an inference;
you have not known him directly -- but the design of the universe, the planning,
the laws, the order. And the order is so superb! It is so minute, so superb, so
infinite! The order is there; everything is humming with an order, a musical
harmony of the whole universe. Someone seems to be hidden behind, but that's an
inference.
Patanjali says inference also can be a help towards right knowledge, but it has
to be right inference. Logic is dangerous; it is double-edged. You can use logic
wrongly; then too you will reach conclusions.
For example, I told you that the plan is there, the design is there; the world
has an order, a beautiful order, perfect. Right inference will be that there
seems to be somebody's hand behind it. We may not be directly aware, we may not
be in direct touch with that hand but a hand seems to be there, hidden. This is
the right inference.
But from the same premises you can infer wrongly also. There have been thinkers
who have said... Diderot has said that, "Because of order I cannot believe there
is God. In the world there seems to be perfect order. Because of this order, I
cannot believe in God." What is his logic? He says if there is a person behind,
then there cannot be so much order. If a person is behind it, then he must
commit sometimes mistakes. Sometimes whimsical he must go, crazy, sometimes he
must change. Laws cannot be so perfect if someone is behind. Laws can be perfect
if there is no one behind and they are simply mechanical.
That too has an appeal. If everything goes perfectly, it looks mechanical
because about man, it is said, to err is human. If some person is there, then he
must err sometimes -- he will get bored with so much perfection. And sometimes
he must like to change.
The water boils at hundred degrees. It has been boiling at hundred degrees for
millennia, always and always. God must get bored, if someone is behind, Diderot
says. So just for a change, one day he will say, "Now, from onwards the water
will boil at ninety degrees." But it has never happened, so there seems to be no
person.
Both arguments look perfect. But Patanjali says right inference is that which
gives you possibilities of growth. It is not a question whether the logic is
perfect or not. The question is your conclusion should become an opening. If
there is no God, it becomes a closing. Then you cannot grow. If you conclude
there is some hidden hand, the world becomes a mystery. And then you are not
here just by accident. Then your life becomes meaningful. Then you are part of a
great scheme. Then something is possible; you can do something you can rise in
awareness.
A right inference means one which can give you growth, that which can give you
growth; a wrong inference is that, howsoever perfect looking, which closes your
growth. Inference can also be a source of right knowledge. Even logic can be
used to be a source of right knowledge, but you have to be very aware what you
are doing. If you are just logical, you may commit suicide through it. Logic can
become a suicide. It becomes for many.
Just a few days before one seeker was here from California. He traveled long.
He had come to meet me. And then he said, "Before I meditate or before you tell
me to meditate, I have heard that whosoever comes to you you push into
meditation, so before you push me in, I have got questions." He had at least a
list of hundred questions. I think he has not left any that is possible -- about
God, about soul, about truth, about heaven, hell and everything -- a sheet full
of questions. He said, "Unless you solve these questions first, I am not going
to meditate."
He is logical in a way because he says, "Unless my questions are answered how
can I meditate? Unless I feel confident that you are right, you have answered my
doubts, how I can go in some direction you show and indicate? You may be wrong.
So you can prove your rightness only if my doubts disappear."
And his doubts are such they cannot disappear. This is the dilemma: if he
meditates they can disappear, but he says he will meditate only when these
doubts are not there. What to do? He says, "First prove there is God. No one has
ever proved, no one can ever. That doesn't mean that God is not there, but he
cannot be proved. He is not a small thing which can be proved or disproved. It
is such a vital thing, you have to live it to know it. No proof can help.
But he is right logically. He says, "Unless you prove how I can start? If there
is no soul, who is going to meditate? So first prove that there is a self, then
I can meditate."
This man is committing suicide. No one will be ever able to answer him. He has
created all the barriers, and through these barriers he will not be able to
grow. But he is logical. What should I do with such a person? If I start
answering his questions, a person who can create a hundred doubts can create
millions, because doubting is a way, a style of mind. You can answer one
question through your answer he will create ten because the mind remains the
same.
He looks for doubts, and if I answer logically I am helping his logical mind to
be fed, to be more strengthened. I am feeding. That will not help. He has to be
brought out of his logicalness.
So I told him that, "Have you ever been in love?" He said, "But why? You are
changing the subject." I said, "I will come to your points, but suddenly it has
become very meaningful to me to ask have you ever loved." He said, "Yes!" His
face changed. I asked, "But you loved before or before falling in love you
doubted the whole phenomenon?"
Then he was disturbed. He was uncomfortable. He said, "No, I never thought
about it. I simply had fallen in love, and then only I became aware." So I said,
"You do the opposite. First think about love, whether love is possible, whether
love exists, whether love can exist. And first let it be proved, and make it a
condition unless it is proved you will not love anybody."
He said, "What you are saying? You will destroy my life. If I make this a
condition, then I cannot love." But, I told him, "This is the same you are
doing. Meditation is just like love. You have to know it first. God is just like
love. That's why Jesus goes on saying that God is love. It is just like love.
First one has to experience."
A logical mind can be closed, and so logically, that he will never feel that he
has closed his own doors of all possibilities for all growth. So inference,
anuman, means thinking in such a way that growth is helped. Then it can become a
source of right knowledge.
And the third is most beautiful. And nowhere else it has been made a source of
right knowledge -- words of the awakened ones, AGAMA. There has been a long
controversy about this third source. Patanjali says you can know directly, then
it is okay. You can infer rightly, then too you are on the right path and you
will reach the source.
But there are few things you cannot infer even, and you have not known. But you
are not the first on this earth, you are not the first seeker. Millions have
been seeking for millions of ages -- and not only on this planet, but on other
planets also. The search is eternal and many have arrived. They have reached the
goal, they have entered the temple. Their words are also a source of right
knowledge.
Agama means the words of those who have known. Buddha says something or Jesus
says something... We don't know what he is saying. We have not experienced that,
so we have no way of judging it.'We don't know what or how to infer rightly
through his words. And the words are contradictory, so you can infer anything
you like.
Few are there who think Jesus was neurotic. Western psychiatrists have been
trying to prove that he was neurotic, he was a maniac. These claims that, "I am
the son of God, and the only son," -- he was mad, an egomaniac, neurotic. It can
be proved that he was neurotic because there are many neurotic people who claim
such things. You can find out. In madhouses there are many people.
In Baghdad it happened once. Caliph Omar was the king, and one man declared on
the streets of Baghdad that "I am the Paigamber, I am the messenger, I am the
prophet. And now Mohammed is cancelled because I am here. I am the last word,
the last message from the divine. And now there is no need for Mohammed, he is
just out of date. He was the messenger up to now, but now I have come. You can
forget Mohammed."
It was not a Hindu country. Hindus can tolerate everything; no one has
tolerated like Hindus. They can tolerate everything because they say, "Unless we
know exactly, we cannot say yes, we cannot say no. He may be the messenger, who
knows?"
But Mohammedans are different, very dogmatic. They cannot tolerate. So Caliph
Omar, having caught the new prophet, threw him in the jail and told him that,
"Twenty-four hours are being given to you. Reconsider. If you say you are not
the prophet, Mohammed is the prophet, then you will be released. If you insist
in your madness, then after twenty-four hours I will come to the jail and you
will be killed."
The man laughed. He said, "Look! This is written in the scriptures -- that
prophets will always be treated like this, as you are treating me." He was
logical. Mohammed himself was treated like that, so this is nothing new. The man
said to Omar, "This is nothing new. This is how things are naturally going to
be. And I am not in any position to reconsider. I am not the authority, I am
just the messenger. Only God can change. In twenty-four hours you can come, you
will find me the same. Only he can change who has appointed me."
While this talk was going on, another madman, who was chained to a pillar,
started laughing. So Omar asked, "Why are you laughing?" He said, "This man is
absolutely wrong. I never appointed him! I cannot allow this. After Mohammed I
have not sent any messenger." In every madhouse these people are there, and
Jesus can be proved that he is a similar case.
And the words are so contradictory and illogical. And every person who has
known is compelled to speak contradictorily, paradoxically, because the truth is
such it can be expressed only through paradoxes. Their statements are not clear;
they are mysterious. And you can conclude anything out of them if you infer. You
infer. Your mind is there; the inference is going to be your inference.
So Patanjali says, a third source. You don't know. If you know directly, then
there is no question, then there is no need of any other source. If you have
direct cognition, then there is no need for inference or for the words of the
enlightened ones, you yourself have become enlightened. Then you can drop the
two other sources. But if this has not happened, then inference, but inference
will be yours. If you are mad, then your inference will be mad. Then the third
source is worth trying -- the words of the enlightened ones.
You cannot prove them, you cannot disprove them. You can only have a trust, and
that trust is hypothetical; it is very scientific. In science also you cannot
proceed without a hypothesis. But hypothesis is not belief. It is just a working
arrangement. A hypothesis is just a direction; you will have to experiment. And
if the experiment proves right, then the hypothesis becomes a theory. If the
experiment goes wrong, then the hypothesis is discarded. The words of the
enlightened ones are to be taken on trust, as a hypothesis. Then work them out
in your life. If they prove true, then the hypothesis has become a faith; if
they prove false, then the hypothesis has to be discarded.
You go to a Buddha. He will say, 'Wait! Be patient, meditate, and for two years
don't ask any question." This you have to take on trust; there is no other way.
You can think, "This man may be just deceiving me. Then my two years life is
wasted. If after two years it is proved that this man was just hocus-pocus, just
a deceiver, or self-deceived -- in an illusion that he has become enlightened --
then my two years are wasted." But there is no other way. You have to take the
risk. And if without trusting Buddha you remain there, these two years will be
useless -- because unless you trust you cannot work. And the work is so intense
that if you have trust only can you move wholly into it, totally into it. If you
don't have trust, then you go on withholding something. And that withholding
will not allow you to experience what Buddha is indicating
Risk is there, but life itself is risk. For higher life, higher risks will be
there. You move on a dangerous path. But remember, there is only one error in
life, and that is not moving at all; that is just afraid, sitting, just afraid
if you move something may go wrong, so it is better to wait and sit. This is the
only error. You will not be in danger, but no growth will be possible.
Patanjali says there are things which you do not know, there are things which
your logic cannot infer. You have to take on trust. Because of this third
source, the guru, the Master, becomes a necessity, someone who knows. And you
have to take the risk, and I say it is a risk, because there is no guarantee.
The whole thing may prove just a wastage, but it is better to take the risk,
because even if it is proved a wastage, you have learned much. Now no other
person will be able to deceive you so easily. At least you have learned this
much.
And if you move with trust, if you move totally follow a Buddha like a shadow,
things may start happening, because they have happened the person: to this
Gautam Buddha, to Jesus, to Mahavira. They have happened, and they know the
path; they have traveled. If you argue with them, you will be the loser. They
cannot be the losers. They will simply leave you aside.
In this century this has happened with Gurdjieff. So many people were attracted
towards him, but he would create such a situation for the new disciples that
unless they can trust totally, they will have to leave immediately -- unless
they can trust even in absurdities. And those absurdities were planned.
Gurdjieff will go on lying. In the morning he will say something, in the
afternoon something else. And you are not to ask! He will shatter your logical
mind completely.
In the morning he will say, "Dig this ditch. And this is a must! By the evening
this must be complete. And the whole day you have been digging it. You have
exerted, you are tired, you will be perspiring, you have not taken food, and by
evening he comes and he says, "Throw the mud back in the ditch! And before you
go to bed it has to be completed."
Now even an ordinary mind will say, 'What do you mean? The whole day I have
wasted. And I was thinking it was something very necessary, by the evening it
has to be completed, and now you say, "Throw the mud back!" If you ask such a
thing, Gurdjieff will say, "You simply leave! You go away! I am not for you; you
are not for me."
The ditch or the digging is not the thing. What he is trying is whether you can
trust him even when he is absurd. And once he knows that you can trust him and
you can move with him wherever he leads, only then real things will follow. Then
the test is over; you have been examined and found authentic -- a real seeker
who can work and who can trust. And then real things can happen to you, never
before.
Patanjali is a Master, and this third source he knows very well through his own
experience with thousands and thousands of disciples. He must have worked with
many, many disciples and seekers, only then it is possible to write such a
treatise as YOGA SUTRAS. It is not by a thinker. It is by one who has
experimented with many types of minds and who has penetrated with many many
layers of minds, every type of person who has worked. This he makes the third
source: the words of the awakened ones.
The second sutra:
WRONG KNOWLEDGE IS A FALSE CONCEPTION NOT CORRESPONDING TO THE THING AS IT IS.
Now some definitions which will be helpful later on The definition of viparyaya
-- wrong knowledge. Wrong knowledge is a false conception of something not
corresponding to the thing as it is. We all have a big burden of wrong knowledge
because before we encounter a fact we have already prejudiced.
If you are a Hindu and someone is introduced to you, and said that he is a
Mohammedan, immediately you have taken a wrong attitude that this man must be
wrong. If you are a Christian and someone is introduced as a Jew, you are not
going to dig this man; you are not going to enter this particular man. Just by
saying, "a Jew", your prejudice has come in; you have already known this man.
Now there is no need, you know what type of man is this -- a Jew.
You have a preconception, a prejudiced mind, and this prejudiced mind gives you
wrong knowledge. All Jews are not bad. Neither are all Christians good, nor all
are Mohammedans bad. Neither are all Hindus good. Really, goodness and badness
doesn't belong to any race, it belongs to persons, individuals. There may be bad
Mohammedans, bad Hindus; good Mohammedans, good Hindus. Goodness and badness
does not belong to any nation, to any race, to any culture, it belongs to
individuals, personalities. But that's difficult, to face a person without any
prejudice. And you will have a revelation.
Once it happened to me. I was traveling. I entered my compartment. And many
people had come to see me off, so the person who was in the compartment, another
passenger, he immediately touched my feet and he said, "You must be a great
saint. So many persons have come to see you off!"
So I told that man that, "I am a Mohammedan. I may be a great saint, but I am a
Mohammedan." He felt shocked! He has touched a Mohammedan's feet, and he was a
Brahmin! He started perspiring; he was nervous. He looked again and he said,
"No, you are joking." Just to console himself he said, "You are joking." "I am
not joking. Why I should joke? You must have inquired before you touched my
feet!"
Then we were both together in the compartment. Again and again he will look at
me and will take a long, deep breath. He must have been thinking to go and take
a bath. But he is not encountering me. I am there, and he is concerned with a
concept of "Mohammedan" and he is a Brahmin, he has become impure by touching
me.
Nobody encounters things, persons, as they are. You have a prejudice. These
prejudices create viparyaya; these prejudices create wrong knowledge. Whatsoever
you think, if you have not freshly come upon the fact it is going to be wrong.
Don't bring your past, don't bring your prejudices. Put aside your mind and
encounter the fact. Just see whatsoever there is to be seen. Don't project.
We go on projecting. Our mind is just completely filled and fixed from the very
childhood. Everything has been given to us ready-made, and through that
readymade knowledge our whole life becomes an illusion. You never meet a real
person, you never see a real flower. Just by hearing "This is a rose" you say,
"Beautiful!" mechanically. You have not felt the beauty; you have not sensed the
beauty; you have not touched this flower. Just "Rose is beautiful" is in your
mind; the moment you hear "rose", the mind projects and says, "It is beautiful!"
And you may believe that you have come to feel that the rose is beautiful; this
is not so. This is false. Just look. That's why children come to things more
deeply than grown-up people -- because they do not know names. They are not yet
prejudiced. If a rose is beautiful, then only it will be beautiful; all roses
are not beautiful. Children come nearer to things, their eyes are fresh. They
see things as they are because they don't know how to project anything.
But we are always in a hurry to make them grown-ups, to make them adults. We
are filling their mind with knowledge, information. This is one of the
recent-most discoveries of psychologists, that when children enter into school
they have more intelligence than when they leave the university. Latest findings
prove this. In the first grade, when children enter, they have more
intelligence. They will have less and less intelligence as they grow in
knowledge.
And by the time they become bachelors and masters and doctors, they are
finished. When they come back with a doctor's degree, a Ph.D., they have left
their intelligence somewhere in the university. They are dead, filled with
knowledge, crammed with knowledge, but this knowledge is just false -- a
prejudice about everything. Now they cannot feel things directly, they cannot
feel live persons directly, they cannot live directly, everything has become
verbal, wordy. It is not real now; it has become mental.
WRONG KNOWLEDGE IS A FALSE
CONCEPTION, NOT CORRESPONDING TO THE THING AS IT IS.
Put aside your prejudices, knowledge, conceptions, preformulated information,
and look fresh, become a child again. And this has to be done moment-to-moment
because every moment you are gathering.
One of the oldest yoga aphorisms is: Die every moment so you can be reborn
every moment. Die every moment to the past, throw all the dust that you have
collected, and look afresh. But this has to be done continuously, because next
moment the dust has gathered again.
Nan-in was in search of a Zen Master when he was a seeker. He lived with his
Master for many years, and then the Master said, "Everything is okay. You have
almost achieved." But he said "almost", so Nan-in said, "What do you mean?" The
Master said, "I will have to send you for a few days to another Master. That
will do the last finishing touch."
Nan-in was very much excited. He said, "Send me immediately!" A letter was
given to him, and he was so excited, he thought he was being sent to someone who
was a greater Master than his own. But when he reached to the man, he was no
one, just a keeper of an inn, a doorkeeper of an inn.
He felt very much disappointed and he thought, "This must be some sort of a
joke. This man is going to be my last Master? He is going to give me the
finishing touch?" But he had come, so he thought, "It is better to be here for a
few days, at least rest, then I will go back. It was a long journey." So he said
to the inn-keeper, "My Master has given this letter."
The innkeeper said, "But I cannot read, so you can keep your letter; it is not
needed. And you can be here." Nan-in said, "But I have been sent to learn
something from you."
The innkeeper said, "I am just an innkeeper, I am not a Master, I am not a
teacher. There must have been some misunderstanding. You may have come to a
wrong person. I am just an innkeeper. I cannot teach; I don't know anything. But
when you have come, you can just watch me. That may be helpful. You rest and
watch."
But there was nothing to watch. In the morning he will open the door of the
inn. Then guests will come and he will clean their things -- the pots, the
utensils and everything -- and he will serve. And in the night again, when
everybody has gone and the guests have gone to sleep to their beds, he will
clean things again, pots, utensils, everything. And in the morning, again the
same.
By the third day, Nan-in was bored. And he said "There is nothing to watch. You
go on cleaning utensils you go on doing ordinary work, so I must leave." The
doorkeeper laughed, but said nothing.
Nan-in came back, was very angry with his Master and said, "Why? Why I was sent
for such a long journey, tedious it was, and the man was just a doorkeeper? And
he didn't teach me anything, and he simply said, 'Watch,' and there was nothing
to watch."
But the Master said, "Still, you were there for three four days. Even if there
was nothing to watch, you must have watched. What you were doing?" So he said,
"I was watching. In the night he will clean the utensils pots, put everything
there, and in the morning he was again cleaning."
The Master said, "This, this is the teaching! This is for what you were sent!
He had cleaned those pots in the night, but in the morning he was again cleaning
those clean pots. What does it mean? Because even by the night, when nothing has
happened, they have become unclean again, some dust has settled again. So you
may be pure: now you are. You may be innocent, but every moment you have to
continue cleaning. You may not do anything, still you become impure just by the
passage of time. Moment to moment, just the passage, not doing anything, just
sitting under a tree, you become unclean. And that uncleanliness is not because
you were doing something bad or something wrong, it happens just through the
passage of time. Dust collects. So you go on cleaning, and this is the last
touch, because I feel you have become proud that you are pure, and now you are
not worried of constant effort to clean."
Moment to moment one has to die and be reborn again. Only then you are freed
from wrong knowledge.
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CONTINUED...
Third:
AN IMAGE CONJURED UP BY
WORDS WITHOUT ANY SUBSTANCE BEHIND IT IS VIKALPA -- IMAGINATION.
Imagination is just through words, verbal structures. You create a thing -- it
is not there, it is not a reality. But you create it through your mental images.
And you can create it to such an extent that you yourself become deceived by it
and you think it is real. This happens in hypnosis. Hypnotize a person and say
anything; he conjures up the image, and that image becomes real. You can do it.
You are doing it in many ways.
One of the most famous American actresses, Greta Garbo, has written a memoir.
She was an ordinary girl, just a homely, ordinary girl, very poor, and working
in a barber shop just for few annas, and she would put soap on the customers'
faces. For three years she was doing that.
One day one American film director was there in that barber shop, and she was
putting soap on his face, and just the way Americans are -- he may not have even
meant it -- he simply looked in the mirror, the reflection of the girl, and
said, "How beautiful!" And Greta Garbo was born that very moment!
She writes: suddenly she became different; she had never thought herself
beautiful; she couldn't conceive of it. And she has never heard anybody saying
that she was beautiful. For the first time she also looked in the mirror and the
face was different -- this man has made her beautiful. And the whole life
changed. She followed the man and became one of the most famous film actress.
What happened? Just a hypnosis, a hypnosis through a word "beautiful" --
worked. It works; it becomes chemical. Everybody believes something about
himself. That belief becomes reality because that belief starts working on you.
Imagination is a force, but it is a conjured-up force, imagined force. You can
use it and you can be used by it. If you can use it, it will be helpful, but if
you are used by it, it is fatal, it is dangerous. Imagination can become madness
any moment; imagination can be helpful if through it, you create a situation for
your inner growth and crystallization.
But it is through words, a conjured-up thing. For human beings, words,
language, verbal constructions have become so significant that nothing is more
significant now. If suddenly someone says, "Fire!" the word "fire will change
you immediately. There may be no fire, you will stop listening to me. There will
be no effort to stop; suddenly you will stop listening to me, you will start
running here and there. The word "fire" has taken imagination.
And you are influenced by words that way. The people in the advertisement
business know what words to use to conjure up images. Through those words they
catch you, they capture the whole market. There are many such words. They go on
changing with the fashions.
For these few years, "new" is the word. So everything, if you look in the
advertisements, is "new" -- "new" Lux Soap. "Lux Soap" won't do. The "new"
appeals immediately. Everybody is for the new; everybody is searching for the
new, something new, because everybody is bored with the old. So anything new has
appeal. That may not be better than the old, may be worse, but just the word
"new" opens vistas in the mind.
These words and their influence have to be understood deeply. For a person who
is in search of the truth he must be aware of the influence of words.
Politicians, advertisement people, they are using words and they can create,
through words, such imagination that you can even put your life -- you can throw
your life just for words.
What are these: "nation", "the national flag" -- just words! "Hinduism" -- you
can say, "hinduism is in danger," and suddenly many people are ready to do
something or even to die. Just few words. Our nation is insulted. What is "our
nation"? Just words. A flag is nothing but a piece of cloth, but a whole nation
can die for the flag because someone has insulted the flag, lowered it. What
nonsense goes on in this world because of words! Words are dangerous. They have
deep sources of influence within you. They trigger something in you, and you can
be captured.
Imagination has to be understood, Patanjali says, because on the path of
meditation words will have to be dropped so that influence by others can be
dropped. Remember, words are taught by others; you are not born with words. They
are taught to you, and through words many prejudices. Through words religion,
through words myths -- everything is fed. Word is the medium, the vehicle of
culture, society, information.
You cannot excite animals to fight for a nation. You cannot excite because they
don't know what "nation" is. That's why there are no wars in the animal kingdom.
There are no wars, no flags, no temples, no mosques. And if animals can look at
us, they are bound to think that man has some obsession with words, because wars
go on around it; millions are killed just because of words.
Someone is a Jew, "Kill him -- just the word "Jew". Change the label, he
becomes a Christian, and then there is no need to kill. But he is not ready to
change the label. He will say, "I will like to be killed but I cannot change my
label. I am a Jew." He is also adamant; others are also adamant. But just words.
Jean-Paul Sartre has written his autobiography and he has given it the title,
"Words". It is beautiful because as far as mind is concerned the whole
autobiography of any mind consists of words and nothing else. And Patanjali says
that one has to be aware of this, because on the path of meditation, words have
to be left behind. Nations, religions, scriptures, languages, they have to be
left behind and man has to become innocent, freed of words. When you are free of
words there will be no imagination, and when there is no imagination you can
face truth. Otherwise, you will go on creating.
If you come to meet God, you must meet him without any words. If you have some
words, he may not fit and suit your idea. Because if a Hindu thinks he has one
thousand hands, and if God comes only with two hands, a Hindu, he will reject:
"You are not a God at all. Only with two hands? God has a thousand hands. Show
me your other hands. Only then I can believe you."
It happened: One of the most beautiful persons of this past century was Sai
Baba of Shirdi. He had a friend and a follower. Sai Baba was a Mohammedan. Or no
one knows whether he was a Mohammedan or a Hindu, but he lived in a mosque, so
it was believed he was a Mohammedan. And a Hindu follower was there, who loved,
respected, has much faith in Sai Baba. Every day he will come for his darshan,
and without seeing him he will not go. Sometimes it will happen that for the
whole day he will have to wait, but without seeing he will not go, and he will
not take food unless he has seen Sai Baba.
Once it happened the whole day passed, there was much gathering and much crowd
-- he couldn't enter. When everybody has gone, just in the night he touched the
feet.
Sai Baba said to him, "Why you unnecessarily wait? There is no need to see me
here, I can come there. And drop this from tomorrow. Now I will do. Before you
take your food you will see me every day."
The disciple was very happy. So next day he was waiting and waiting; nothing
happened. Many things happened really, but nothing happened according to his
conception. By the evening he was very angry. He has not taken the food, and Sai
Baba has not appeared so he went again. He said, "You promise and you don't
fulfill?"
Sai Baba said, "But I appeared thrice, not even once. First time I came, I was
a beggar and you said to me, 'Move away! Don't come here!' Second time I came I
was an old woman, and you just won't look at me; you closed your eyes-because
the disciple had the habit of not seeing women; he was practicing not seeing
women, so he closed the eyes. Sai Baba said, "I had come, but what do you
expect? Should I enter your eyes, closed eyes? I was standing there, but you
closed the eyes. The moment you saw me, you closed the eyes. Then third time I
reached as a dog, and you won't allow me in. With a stick you were standing in
the door."
And these three things had happened. And these things have been happening to
whole humanity. The divine comes in many forms, but you have a prejudice; you
have a pre-formulated conception; you cannot see. He must appear according to
you, and he never appears according to you. And he will never appear according
to you. You cannot be the rule for him and you cannot put any conditions.
When all imagination falls, only then truth appears. Otherwise, imagination
goes on making conditions and truth cannot appear. Only in a naked mind, in a
nude, empty mind, truth appears, because you cannot distort it.
Fourth sutra:
THE MODIFICATION OF THE MIND WHICH IS BASED ON THE ABSENCE OF ANY CONTENT IN IT
IS SLEEP.
This is the definition of sleep, the fourth modification of the mind: when
there is no content. Mind is always with content, except sleep. Something or
other is there. Some thought is moving, some passion is moving, some desire is
moving, some memory, some future imagination, some word, something is moving.
Something continues continuously. Only when you are fast asleep, deep asleep,
contents stop. Mind disappears, and you are in yourself without any content.
This has to be remembered because this is going to be the state of samadhi
also, with only one difference: you will be aware. In sleep, you are unaware,
mind goes completely to non-existence. You are alone, left alone -- no thought,
just your being. But you are not aware. Mind is not there to disturb you, but
you are not aware.
Otherwise sleep can become enlightenment. Contentless consciousness is there,
but the consciousness is not alert. It is hidden -- just in a seed. In samadhi,
the seed is broken; the consciousness becomes alert. And when consciousness is
alert and there is no content, this is the goal. Sleep with awareness is the
goal.
This is the fourth modification of the mind-sleep. But that goal, sleep with
awareness, is not a modification of the mind, it is beyond mind. Awareness is
beyond mind. If you can join sleep and awareness together, you have become
enlightened. But it is difficult because even when we are awake in the day we
are not alert. Even when we are awake, we are not awake. The word is false. When
we sleep how can we be awake? When we are awake we are not awake.
So one has to start from the day when you are awake. You have to be more awake,
more and more intensely awake. And then you have to try with dreams: in dream
you have to be alert. Only if you succeed with the waking state, then with the
dreaming state, then you will be able to succeed with the third state of sleep.
Try first walking on the street. Try to be awake. Just don't go on walking
automatically, mechanically. Be alert of every movement, of every breath that
you take. Exhale, inhale -- be alert. Of every eye movement you are doing, of
every person you look at, be alert. What you are doing, be alert and do it with
alertness.
And then in the night, while you are falling asleep, try to remain alert. The
last phase of the day will be passing; memories will be floating. Remain alert,
and try to fall asleep with alertness. It will be difficult, but if you try,
within a few weeks, you will have a glimpse: you are asleep and alert. Even for
a single moment, and it is so beautiful, it is so bliss-filled, that you will
never be the same again.
And then you will not say that sleep is just wasting time. It can become the
most precious sadhana, because when the waking state goes and the sleeping
starts there is a change, a change of gears inside. It is just like change of
gears in a car. When you change gears from one gear to another, for a single
moment, between these two, there is a neutral gear, there is no gear. That
moment of neutrality is very significant.
The same happens in the mind. When from waking you move to the sleep, there is
a moment when you are neither awake nor asleep. In that moment there is no gear,
mechanism is not functioning. Your automatic personality is nullified in that
moment. In that moment your old habits will not force you in a certain pattern.
In that moment you can escape and become alert.
This moment in India has been called sandhya, the moment in between. There are
two sandhyas, two in-between moments: one in the night when you go from the
waking to sleep, and another in the morning when you again move from sleep to
waking. And these two Hindus have called the moments of prayer, sandhyaka! --
the period in between because then your personality is not there for a single
moment. In that single moment you are pure, innocent. If in that moment you can
become alert, your whole life will have changed. You have put a base for
transformation.
And then try, in the dream state, to be alert. There are methods how to be
alert in a dream state. Do one thing, if you want to try... First try in the
waking. When you succeed in the waking, then you will be able to succeed in the
dreaming. Because dreaming is deeper, more effort will be needed. And difficult
also, because what to do in a dream and how to do?
For the dreaming, Gurdjieff developed a beautiful method. It is one of the old
Tibetan methods, and Tibetan seekers have worked very deeply into the dreamworld.
The method is, just falling into sleep, you try to remember one thing, any one
thing, just a rose flower. Just visualize a rose flower. And just go on thinking
that you will see it in the dream. Visualize it and go on thinking that in the
dream, whatsoever the dream, this rose flower must be there. Visualize its color,
its scent -- everything. Feel it so it will become alive inside you. And with
that rose flower, fall into sleep.
Within few days you will be able to bring that flower into your dream. This is
a great success because now you have created at least a part of the dream. Now
you are the master. At least one part of the dream, the flower, has come. And
the moment you see the flower, you will immediately remember this is a dream.
There is no other need. The flower and "This is a dream" have become associated
because you have created the flower in the dream. And you were thinking
continuously for this flower to appear in the dream, and the flower has
appeared. Immediately you will recognize this is a dream, and the whole quality
of the dream will change, the flower-dream and everything around the dream. You
have become alert.
And then you can enjoy the dream in a new way, just like a film, and then if
you want to stop the dream you can simply stop, put off. But that will take a
little more time and more practice. And then you can create your own dreams.
There is no need to be a victim of dreams. You can create your own dreams; you
can live your own dreams. You can have a theme just before you fall into sleep;
you can direct your dreams just like a film director. And you can create a theme
out of it.
Tibetans have used dream creations, because through dream creation you can
change your total mind, the structure. And when you succeed in dreams, then you
can succeed in sleep. But there is no technique for sleep because there is no
content. A technique can work only with a content. Because there is no content,
no technique can help. But through dream you will learn to be aware, and that
awareness can be carried on into the sleep.
The last sutra:
MEMORY IS THE CALLING UP OF PAST EXPERIENCE.
These are definitions. He is clarifying things so later on you need not get
mixed up. What is memory? -- calling up of past experiences. Continuously,
memory is happening. Whenever you see something, immediately memory comes in and
distorts it. You have seen me before. You see me again, immediately memory comes
in. If you had seen me five years before, then the picture of five years, the
past picture, will come into your eyes and fill your eyes. And you will see me
through that picture.
That's why, if you have not seen your friend for many days, the moment you see
you immediately say, "You are looking very thin," or "You are looking very
unhealthy," or "You have gathered fat." Immediately! Why? Because you are
comparing; the memory has come in. The man himself is not aware that he has
gathered fat or he has become thin, but you become aware because immediately you
can compare. The past, the last picture comes in, and immediately you can
compare.
And this memory is continuously there, being projected on everything you see.
This past memory has to be dropped. It should not be a constant interference in
your knowing because it doesn't allow you to know the new. You always know in
the pattern of the old. It doesn't allow you to feel the new, it makes
everything old and rotten. Because of this memory, everybody is bored; the whole
humanity is bored. Look at anybody's face, he is bored, bored to death. There is
nothing new, no ecstasy.
Why children are so ecstatic, and for such simple things you cannot imagine how
this ecstasy is happening. Just for few colored stones on the beach and they
start dancing. What is happening to them? Why you cannot dance? Because you know
those are just stones; your memory is there. For those children there is no
memory, those stones are a new phenomenon -- as if they have reached to the
moon.
I was reading when the first man reached the moon all over the world there was
excitement. And everybody was looking on their TV's, but within fifteen minutes,
everybody was bored, finished. What to do now? The man is walking on the moon.
After just fifteen minutes and this dream has taken millions of years to reach
there... And nobody is now interested what is happening.
Everything becomes old. Immediately it becomes memory, it becomes old. If you
can drop your memories! Dropping doesn't mean that you cease to remember,
dropping only means this constant interference. When you need, you can pull it
back to the focus. When you don't need it, just let it be there silently, not
coming continuously.
Past, if continuously present, will not allow present to be. And if you miss
the present, you miss all.
By OSHO...THE Alpha and the Omega, Volume 1.
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