ZEN, THE FARTHEST STAR AND NIETSZCHE
Join the Farthest Star, the Spring at the top of the Mountain!!
LIKE THE EMPTY
SKY IT HAS NO BOUNDARIES, YET IT IS RIGHT IN THIS PLACE, EVER PROFOUND AND
CLEAR. WHEN YOU SEEK TO KNOW IT, YOU CANNOT SEE IT, YOU CANNOT TAKE HOLD OF IT,
BUT YOU CANNOT LOSE IT. IN NOT BEING ABLE TO GET IT YOU GET IT. WHEN YOU ARE
SILENT IT SPEAKS; WHEN YOU SPEAK, IT IS SILENT. THE GREAT GATE IS WIDE OPEN TO
BESTOW ALMS, AND NO CROWD IS BLOCKING THE WAY.
First a few fundamentals....
Zen is not a theology, it is a religion -- and religion without a theology is a
unique phenomenon. All other religions exist around the concept of God. They
have theologies. They are God-centric not man-centric; man is not the end, God
is the end. But not so for Zen. For Zen, man is the goal, man is the end unto
himself God is not something above humanity, God is something hidden within
humanity. Man is carrying God in himself as a potentiality.
So there is no concept of God in Zen. If you want you can say that it is not
even a religion -- because how can there be a religion without the concept of
God? Certainly those who have been brought up as Christians, Mohammedans,
Hindus, Jews, cannot conceive of what sort of religion Zen is. If there is no
God then it becomes atheism. It is not. It is theism to the very core -- but
without a God.
This is the first fundamental to be understood. Let it sink deep within you,
then things will become clear.
Zen says that God is not extrinsic to religion, it is intrinsic. It is not
there, it is here. In fact there is no 'there' for Zen, all is here. And God is
not then, God is now -- and there is no other time. There is no other space, no
other time. This moment is all. In this moment the whole existence converges, in
this moment all is available. If you cannot see it that does not mean that it is
not available -- it simply means you don't have the vision to see it. God has
not to be searched for, you have only to open your eyes. God is already the
case.
Prayer is irrelevant in Zen -- to whom to pray? There is no God sitting there
somewhere in the heavens and controlling life, existence. There is no
controller. Life is moving in a harmony on its own accord. There is nobody
outside it giving it commandments. When there is an outside authority it creates
a kind of slavery... a Christian becomes a slave, the same happens to a
Mohammedan. When God is there commanding, you can be at the most a servant or a
slave. You lose all dignity.
Not so with Zen. Zen gives you tremendous dignity. There is no authority
anywhere. Freedom is utter and ultimate.
Had Friederich Nietzsche known anything about Zen he might have turned into a
mystic rather than going mad. He had stumbled upon a great fact. He said, 'There
is no God. God is dead -- and man is free.' But basically he was brought up in
the world of the Jews and the Christians, a very narrow world, very much
confined in concepts. He stumbled upon a great truth: 'There is no God. God is
dead, hence man is free.' He stumbled upon the dignity of freedom, but it was
too much. For his mind it was too much. He went mad, he went berserk. Had he
known anything like Zen he would have turned into a mystic -- there was no need
to go mad.
One can be religious without a God. In fact, how can one be religious with a
God? That is the question Zen asks, a very disturbing question. How can a man be
religious with a God? -- because God will destroy your freedom, God will
dominate you. You can look into the Old Testament. God says, 'I am a very
jealous God and I cannot tolerate any other God. Those who are not with me are
against me. And I am a very violent and cruel God and I will punish you and you
will be thrown into eternal hell fire.' How can man be religious with such a
God? How can you be free and how can you bloom? Without freedom there is no
flowering. How can you come to your optimum manifestation when there is a God
confining you, condemning you, forcing you this way and that, manipulating you?
Zen says that with God, man will remain a slave; with God, man will remain a
worshipper; with God, man will remain in fear. In fear how can you bloom? You
will shrink, you will become dry, you will start dying. Zen says that when there
is no God there is tremendous freedom, there is no authority in existence. Hence
there arises great responsibility. Look... if you are dominated by somebody you
cannot feel responsible. Authority necessarily creates irresponsibility;
authority creates resistance; authority creates reaction, rebellion, in you --
you would like to kill God. That's what Nietzsche means when he says God is dead
-- it is not that God has committed a suicide, he has been murdered.
He has to be murdered. With him there is no possibility to be free -- only
without him. But then Nietzsche became very afraid himself. To live without God
needs great courage, to live without God needs great meditation, to live without
God needs great awareness -- that was not there. That's why I say he stumbled
upon the fact, it was not a discovery. He was groping in the dark.
For Zen it is a discovery. It is an established truth: there is no God. Man is
responsible for himself and for the world he lives in. If there is suffering,
you are responsible; there is nobody else to look to. You cannot throw off your
responsibility. If the world is ugly and is in pain, we are responsible -- there
is nobody else. If we are not growing we cannot throw the responsibility on
somebody else's shoulders. We have to take the responsibility.
When there is no God you are thrown back to yourself. Growth happens. You have
to grow. You have to take hold of your life; you have to take the reins in your
own hands. Now you are the master. You have to be more alert and more aware
because for whatsoever is going to happen you will be responsible. This gives
great responsibility. One starts becoming more alert, more aware. One starts
living in a totally different way. One becomes more watchful. One becomes a
witness.
And when there is no beyond.... The beyond is within you, there is no beyond
beyond you. In Christianity the beyond is beyond; in Zen the beyond is within.
So the question is not to raise your eyes towards the sky and pray -- that is
meaningless, you are praying to an empty sky. The sky is far lower in
consciousness than you.
ENERGY ENHANCEMENT
THE CORE ENERGY TECHNIQUES !!
CONTINUED...
Somebody is praying to a tree.... Many Hindus go and pray to a tree, many
Hindus go to the Ganges and pray to the river, many pray to a stone statue, many
pray towards the sky or many pray towards a concept, an idea. The higher is
praying towards the lower. Prayer is meaningless.
Zen says: only meditation. It is not that you have to kneel down before
somebody. Drop this old habit of slavery. All that is needed is that you have to
become quiet and silent and go withinwards to find your centre. That very centre
is the centre of existence too. When you have come to your innermost core you
have come to the innermost core of existence itself. That's what God is in Zen.
But they don't call it God. It is good that they don't call it God.
So the first thing to remember is that Zen is not a theology, it is a religion
-- and that too with a tremendous difference. It is not a religion like Islam.
There are three fundamentals in Islam: one God, one book, and one prophet. Zen
has no God,, no book, no prophet. The whole existence is God's prophecy; the
whole existence is his message.
And remember, God is not separate from this message either. This message itself
is divine. There is no messenger -- all that nonsense has been completely
dropped by Zen. Theology arises with one book. It needs a Bible, it needs a holy
Koran. It needs a book which pretends to be holy, it needs a book which tries to
say that it is special -- that no other book is like this, this is a Godsend, a
gospel.
Zen says everything is divine so how can anything be special? All is special.
Nothing is non-special so nothing can be special. Each leaf of every tree and
each pebble on every shore is special, unique, holy. It is not that the Koran is
holy, not that the Bible is holy. When a lover writes a letter to his beloved
that letter is holy.
Zen brings holiness to ordinary life.
A great Zen Master, Bokoju, used to say, 'How wondrous this. How mysterious. I
carry fuel, I draw water.'
'How wondrous this. How mysterious.' Carrying fuel, drawing water from the well
and he says, 'How mysterious.' This is the Zen spirit. It transforms the
ordinary into the extraordinary. It transforms the profane into the sacred. It
drops the division between the world and the divine.
That's why I say it is not a theology. It is pure religion. Theology
contaminates religion. There is no difference between a Mohammedan and a
Christian and a Hindu as far as religion is concerned but there is great
difference as far as theology is concerned . They have different theologies.
People have been fighting because of theology.
Religion is one; theologies are many. Theology means the philosophy about God,
the logic about God. It is all meaningless because there is no way to prove God
-- there is no way to disprove either. Argumentation is just irrelevant. Yes,
one can experience but one cannot prove -- and that's what theology goes on
doing. And theology goes on doing such stupid things -- logic chopping. When you
look at it from a distance you will laugh. It is so ridiculous.
In the Middle Ages, Christian theologians were very much concerned, very much
troubled, puzzled about problems which will not look like problems to you. For
example, how many angels can stand on the point of a needle? Books have been
written about it -- great argumentation.
Mulla Nasrudin, the owner of two lovebirds, sent for a veterinarian. 'I'm
worried about my birds,' he announced. 'They haven't gone potty all week.'
The doctor looked inside the cage and asked, 'Do you always line this thing
with maps of the earth?'
'No,' answered Mulla Nasrudin, 'I put that in last Saturday when I was out of
newspapers.'
'That explains it!' replied the vet. 'Love-birds are very sensitive creatures.
They're holding back because they figure this planet earth has taken all the
crap it can stand!'
Theology is crap. And because of theology, religion becomes poisoned. A really
religious person has no theology. Yes, he has got the experience, he has the
truth, he has that luminosity, but he has no theology. But theology has been of
great help to scholars, pundits, the so-called learned people. It has been of
great interest to the priests, to the popes, to the SHANKARACHARYAS. It has been
of great benefit to them.
Their whole business depends on it.
Zen cuts the very root. It destroys the very business of the priest. And that
is one of the ugliest businesses in the world because it depends on a very great
deception. The priest has not known and he goes on preaching; the theologian has
not known but he goes on spinning theories. He is as ignorant as anybody else --
maybe even more so. But his ignorance has become very, very articulate. His
ignorance is very decorated -- decorated with scriptures, decorated with
theories; decorated so cunningly and cleverly that it is very difficult to
detect the flaw. Theology has not been of any help to humanity but certainly it
has helped many people: the priests. They have been able to exploit humanity in
the name of foolish theories.
Two psychiatrists meeting in a busy restaurant got to talking and one said he
was treating a rather interesting case of schizophrenia.
At that the other analyst balked. 'What's so interesting about that?
Split-personality cases are rather common, I would say.'
'This case is interesting,' responded his colleague. 'They both pay!'
That's how theologians have lived. Theology is politics. It divides people. And
if you can divide people you can rule them.
Zen looks at humanity with undivided vision -- it does not divide. It has a
total look. That's why I say that Zen is the religion of the future. Humanity is
growing slowly towards that awareness where theology will be dropped and
religion will be accepted purely as an experience.
In Japanese they have a special word for it. They call it KONOMAMA or SONOMAMA
-- 'Thisness' of existence. This -- capital 'This' -- is it. This isness of life
is God. It is not that God is, but the very isness is divine: the isness of a
tree, the isness of a rock, the isness of a man, the isness of a woman, the
isness of a child. And that isness is an undefined phenomenon, undefinable. You
can dissolve into it, you can merge into it, you can taste it. 'How wondrous.
How mysterious.'
But you cannot define it, you cannot pinpoint it logically, you cannot
formulate it into clear-cut concepts. Concepts kill it. Then it is the isness no
more. Then it is a mind-construction. The word 'God' is not God, the concept
'God' is not God. Neither is the concept 'love' love nor is the word 'food'
food. Zen says a very simple thing. It says: remember that the menu is not the
food. And don't start eating the menu. That's what people have been doing down
the centuries: eating the menu.
And of course, if they are undernourished, if they are not flowing, if they are
not vital, if they are not living totally, it is natural, it is predictable.
They have not lived on real food. They have been talking too much about food and
they have completely forgotten what food is. God has to be eaten, God has to be
tasted, God has to be lived -- not argued about.
The process of 'about' is theology. And that 'about' goes round and round, it
never comes to the real thing. It is a vicious circle. Logic is a vicious
circle. And Zen makes every effort to bring you out of that vicious circle.
How is logic a vicious circle? The premise already has the conclusion in it.
The conclusion is not going to be something new, it is contained in the premise.
And then in the conclusion the premise is contained. It is like a seed: the tree
is contained in the seed and then the tree will give birth to many more seeds
and in those seeds trees will be contained. It is a vicious circle: seed, tree,
seed. It goes on. Or, egg, hen, egg, hen, egg... it goes on ad infinitum. It is
a circle.
To break out of this circle is what Zen is all about -- not to go on moving in
your mind through words and concepts but to drop into existence itself.
A great Zen Master, Nanin, was cutting a tree in the forest. And a professor of
a university came to see him. Naturally the professor thought that this
woodcutter must know where Nanin lived in the hills, so he enquired. The
woodcutter took his axe in his hand and said, 'I had to pay very much for it.'
The professor had not enquired about his axe. He was enquiring where Nanin
lived; he was enquiring if he would be in the temple if he went there. And Nanin
raised the axe and said, 'Look, I had to pay very much for it.' The professor
felt a little puzzled and before he could escape, Nanin came even closer and put
his axe just on the head of the professor. The professor started trembling and
Nanin said, 'It is really sharp.' And the professor escaped.
Later on, when he reached the temple he came to know that the woodcutter was
nobody but Nanin himself. Then he enquired, 'Is he mad?'
'No,' the disciple said. 'You had asked if Nanin was in and he was saying yes.
He was showing his "inness" and "isness". That moment he was a woodcutter; that
moment, axe in his hand, he was totally absorbed in the sharpness of the axe. He
was that sharpness in that moment. He was saying "I am in" by being so
immediate, by being so totally in the present. You missed the point. He was
showing you the quality of Zen.'
Zen is non-conceptual, non-intellectual. It is the only religion in the world
which preaches immediacy; moment to moment immediacy; to be present in the
moment, no past, no future.
But people have lived with theologies. And those theologies keep them childish,
they don't allow them to grow. You cannot grow by being confined in a theology,
by being a Christian or a Hindu or a Mohammedan or even a Buddhist. You cannot
grow; you don't have space enough to grow. You are confined very much, in a very
narrow space; you are imprisoned.
A young priest took a hundred thousand dollars from the church safe and lost it
on the stock market. Then his beautiful wife left him. In despair he went down
to the river and was just about to jump off the bridge when he was stopped by a
woman in a black cloak with a wrinkled face and stringy gray hair.
'Don't jump,' she rasped. 'I'm a witch, and I'll grant you three wishes if you
do something for me!'
'I'm beyond help,' he replied.
'Don't be silly,' she said. ,'Alakazam! The money is back in the church vault.
Alakazam! Your wife is home waiting for you with love in her heart. Alakazam!
You now have two hundred thousand dollars in the bank!'
'That's w-w-wonderful,' stuttered the priest. 'What do I have to do for you?'
'Spend the night making love to me.'
The thought of sleeping with the toothless old hag was repellent, but certainly
worth it, so they retired to a nearby motel. In the morning, the distasteful
ordeal over, the priest was dressing to go home when the bat in the bed said,
'Say sonny, how old are you?'
'I'm forty-two!' he replied. 'Why?'
'Ain't you a little old to believe in witches?'
That's what happens. If you believe in God you can believe in a witch, it is
the same package. If you can believe in one kind of nonsense, you can believe in
all kinds of nonsense. But you never grow. You remain juvenile.
Zen means maturity. Zen means drop all wishes and see what is the case. Don't
bring your dreams into reality. Clean your eyes completely of dreams so that you
can see what is the case. That isness is called KONOMAMA or SONOMAMA. KONO or
SONOMAMA means the isness of a thing -- reality in its isness. All ideologies
prevent you from seeing. Ideologies are all blindfolds, they obstruct your
vision. A Christian cannot see, neither can a Hindu, nor a Mohammedan. Because
you are so full of your ideas you go on seeing what you want to see, you go on
seeing what is not there, you go on projecting, you go on interpreting, you go
on creating a private reality of your own which is not there. This creates a
sort of insanity. Out of a hundred of your so-called saints, ninety-nine are
insane people.
Zen brings sanity to the world, utter sanity. It drops all ideologies. It says:
'Be empty. Look without any idea. Look into the nature of things but with no
idea, with no prejudice, with no pre-supposition.' Don't be preoccupied -- that
is one of the fundamentals. So theology has to be dropped otherwise you remain
preoccupied.
Can you see the point? If you have an idea, there is every possibility that you
will find it in reality -- because the mind is very, very creative. Of course,
that creation will be only in imagination. If you are seeking Christ you may
start having visions of Christ, and they will be all imaginary. If you are
seeking Krishna you will start seeing Krishna, and they will be all imaginary.
Zen is very down-to-earth. It says that imagination has to be dropped.
Imagination comes out of your past. From childhood you have been conditioned for
certain ideas. From childhood you have been taken to the church, to the temple,
to the mosque; you have been taken to the scholar, to the pundit, to the priest;
you have been forced to listen to sermons -- all kinds of things have been
thrown into your minds. Burdened with all that, don't come to reality --
otherwise you will never come to know what reality is.
Unburden. That unburdening is Zen.
A minister of the Gospel was conducting religious services in an asylum for the
insane. His discourse was suddenly interrupted by one of the inmates crying out
wildly, 'I say, have we got to listen to this tommyrot?'
The minister, surprised and confused, turned to the keeper and said, 'Shall I
stop speaking?'
The keeper replied, 'No, no, keep right on, that won't happen again, not at
least for seven years. That man has only one sane moment every seven years.
It is really very difficult to be sane in an insane world.
Zen is simple and yet difficult. Simple as far as Zen is concerned -- it is the
most simple thing, the simplest, because it is a spontaneous thing -- but very
difficult because of our conditioned minds, because of the insane world in which
we live, by which we have been brought up, by which we have been corrupted.
The second thing: Zen is not a philosophy, it is poetry. It does not propose,
it simply persuades. It does not argue, it simply sings its own song. It is
aesthetic to the very core, it is not ascetic. It does not believe in being
arrogant, aggressive, towards reality, it believes in love. It believes that if
we participate with reality, reality reveals its secrets to us. It creates a
participatory consciousness. It is poetry, it is pure poetry -- just as it is
pure religion.
Zen is very, very concerned with beauty -- less concerned with truth, more
concerned with beauty. Why? Because truth is a dry symbol. It is not only dry in
itself but people who become too much concerned with truth become dry also. They
start dying. Their hearts shrink, their juices flow no more. They become
loveless, they become violent, and they start moving more and more in the head.
And Zen is not a head thing, it is a total thing. Not that the head is denied,
but it has to be given its right place. It is not given any dominant status. It
has to function with the totality. The guts are as important as the head, the
feet are as important as the head, the heart is as important as the head. The
total should function as an organism. Nobody should be dominated.
Philosophy is head-oriented; poetry is more total. Poetry has more flow to it.
Poetry is more concerned about beauty. And beauty is non-violence and beauty is
love and beauty is compassion.
The Zen seeker looks into reality to find out the beautiful... in the songs of
the birds, in the trees, in the dance of a peacock, in the clouds, in the
lightning, in the sea, in the sands. It tries to look for the beautiful.
Naturally, to look for the beautiful has a totally different impact. When you
are searching for truth you are more male; when you are searching for beauty.
you are more female. When you are searching for truth you are more concerned
with reason; when you are searching for beauty you have to be more and more
concerned with intuition. Zen is feminine. Poetry is feminine. Philosophy is
very male, very aggressive. It is a male mind.
Zen is passive -- that's why in Zen, sitting became one of the most important
meditations. Just sitting -- zazen. Zen people say that if you simply sit doing
nothing, things will happen. Things will happen on their own; you need not go
after them, you need not seek them, you need not search for them. They will
come. You simply sit. If you can sit silently, if you can fall into a tremendous
restfulness, if you can 'unlax' yourself, if you can drop all tensions and
become a silent pool of energy, going nowhere, searching nothing, God starts
pouring into you. From everywhere God rushes towards you. Just sitting, doing
nothing, the spring comes and the grass grows by itself.
And remember, when Zen says 'just sitting' it means just sitting -- nothing
else, not even a mantra. If you are repeating a mantra you are not just sitting,
you are again getting into some tommyrot, again into some mind thing. If you are
not doing anything whatsoever.... Thoughts are coming, coming; they are going,
going -- if they come, good; if they don't come, good. You are not concerned
with what is happening, you are simply sitting there. If you feel tired you lie
down. If you feel your legs getting tense you spread them. You remain natural.
Not even watching. Not making any effort of any kind. That's what they mean by
just sitting. Just sitting it happens.
Zen is the feminine approach and religion is basically feminine. Science is
male, philosophy is male -- religion is female. All that is beautiful in the
world -- poetry, painting, dance -- has all come from the feminine mind.
It may not have come from women because women have not been free to create yet.
Their days are coming. When Zen becomes more and more significant in the world,
the feminine mind will have a great upsurge, a great explosion.
Things move in a togetherness. The past has been male-dominated -- hence Islam
and Christianity and Hinduism. The future is going to be more feminine, more
soft, more passive, more relaxed, more aesthetic, more poetic. In that poetic
atmosphere Zen will become the most significant thing in the world.
Philosophy is logic; poetry is love. Philosophy dissects, analyses; poetry
synthesises, puts things together. Philosophy is basically destructive; poetry
is life-giving. Analysis is the method of philosophy -- and it is the method of
science, the method of psychoanalysts. Sooner or later psychoanalysis will have
to be replaced by the more profound psychosynthesis. Assagioli is far more right
than Sigmund Freud because synthesis is closer to truth. The world is one. It is
a unity. Nothing is separate. Everything pulsates together. We are joined with
each other, interlinked. The whole life is a net. Even the small leaf around
this Chuang Tzu auditorium is joined with the farthest star. If something
happens to this leaf something is going to happen to that farthest star too.
Everything is together, this togetherness. Existence is a family.
Zen says don't dissect, don't analyse.
A farmer, who was a witness in a railroad case up in Vermont, was asked to tell
in his own way how the accident happened.
'Well, Jake and me was walking down the track and I heard a whistle, and I got
off the track and the train went by, and I got back on the track and I didn't
see Jake. But I walked along and pretty soon I seen Jake's hat, and I walked on
and I seen one of Jake's laigs, and then I seen one of Jake's arms, and then
another laig, and then over on one side Jake's head, and I says, "By crickey!
Something musta happened to Jake!"'
That's what has happened to humanity. Something has happened. Man has been cut
into parts. There are now specialists: somebody takes care of the eyes and
somebody takes care of the heart and somebody takes care of the head and
somebody takes care of something else. Man is divided.
Zen says man is a total organism.
In modern science a new concept is becoming very prevalent -- they call it
androgeny. Buckminster Fuller has defined androgeny as the characteristic of a
whole system, an organism. An organism has something which is not just the sum
total of its parts. It is called synergetic -- that is, more than the simple sum
of its parts. When these parts are united in a functioning whole, in a working
order, a synergetic dividend appears -- the 'tick'. You can open a clock and you
separate everything -- the tick disappears. You put the parts together again in
a functioning order -- the tick appears again. The tick is something very new.
No single part can be made responsible for it; no single part had it. It is the
whole that ticks.
That tick is the soul. You take my hand away, you take my leg away, you take my
head away, and the tick disappears. The tick is the very soul. But the tick
remains only in an organic unity.
God is the tick of this whole existence. You cannot find God by dissecting, God
can be found only in a poetic vision of unity. God is a synergetic experience.
Science can never reveal it, philosophy can never come to it -- only a poetic
approach, a very passive, a very loving approach, can. When you fall en rapport
with existence, when you are no more separate as a seeker, when you are no more
separate as a watcher, when you are no more separate as an observer, when you
are lost into it, utterly lost it is there, the tick.
The third thing: Zen is not science but magic. But it is not the magic of the
magicians, it is magic as a way to look into life. Science is intellectual. It
is an effort to destroy the mystery of life. It kills the wonder. It is against
the miraculous. Zen is all for it -- for the miraculous, for the mysterious.
The life mystery has not to be solved because it cannot be solved. It has to be
lived. One has to move into it, cherish it. It is a great joy that life is a
mystery. It has to be celebrated.
Zen is magic. It gives you the key to open the miraculous. And the miraculous
is in you and the key is also in you.
When you come to a Zen Master he simply helps you to be silent so that you can
find your key which you are carrying all along the way, and you can find your
door -- which is there -- and you can enter into your own innermost shrine.
And the last fundamental: Zen is not morality, it is aesthetics. It does not
impose a code of morality, it does not give you any commandments: do this, don't
do that. It simply makes you more sensitive towards the beautiful, and that very
sensitivity becomes your morality. But then it arises out of you, out of your
consciousness, Zen does not give you any conscience as against consciousness; it
simply gives you more consciousness and your More consciousness becomes your
conscience. Then it is not that Moses gives you a commandment, it is not that it
comes from the Bible or Koran or Vedas... it is not coming from outside. It
comes from your innermost core.
And when it comes from there it is not a slavery, it is freedom. When it comes
from there it is not that you are doing it as a duty, reluctantly. You enjoy
doing it. It becomes your love.
These are the fundamentals. And now this profound sutra.
LIKE THE EMPTY SKY IT HAS NO
BOUNDARIES,
YET IT IS RIGHT IN THIS PLACE, EVER PROFOUND AND CLEAR.
Replace 'it' by 'God' and you will immediately understand -- but Zen people
don't use the word 'God', they say 'it'.
LIKE THE EMPTY SKY IT HAS NO
BOUNDARIES,
YET IT IS RIGHT IN THIS PLACE, EVER PROFOUND AND CLEAR.
If you start looking for the sky you will never find it. If you start searching
and you become very serious you will never find the sky. Where will you find the
sky? The sky is not somewhere, it iS everywhere and that which is everywhere
cannot be searched for. You cannot locate it; you cannot say it is in the north,
you cannot say it is in the south, you cannot say it is there -- because it is
everywhere. That which is everywhere cannot be found somewhere. And where will
you search? You will be rushing into the sky itself, here and there. And it is
all sky. God is like the sky, like the empty sky.
It has no boundaries so it cannot be defined. You cannot say where it begins
and where it ends. It is eternal, it is infinite -- yet it is right in this
place, just in front of you. If you are relaxed it is there; if you become tense
it disappears.
A Zen Master used to say, 'It is clear and so it is hard to see. A dunce once
searched for a fire with a lighted lantern. Had he known what fire was he could
have cooked his rice much sooner.'
Now with a lighted lantern you are searching for fire and you are carrying fire
in your hands all the time. Yes, the Zen Master was right: had he known what
fire was he could have cooked his rice much sooner. You could have always cooked
your rice much sooner. And you are hungry, and you have been hungry for
centuries, for eternity. And you have been searching for fire with a lighted
lantern in your hand.
People go on asking where God is and he is just in front of you. He surrounds
you. He is in and he is out because only he is. But Zen people call it 'it' so
that you don't get trapped into the word 'God'.
WHEN YOU SEEK TO KNOW IT, YOU
CANNOT SEE IT.
Why? Because when you want to know it your very wanting becomes a tense state
of affairs. You become narrow. You become concentrated. WHEN YOU SEEK TO KNOW
IT? YOU CANNOT SEE IT. You miss -- because it can be seen only when you are
utterly relaxed, when you are open from everywhere, when you are not
concentrated.
Listen to it. Ordinarily people who don't know what meditation is, write that
meditation is concentration. There are thousands of books in which you will find
this statement, this utterly stupid statement -- that meditation is
concentration. Meditation is not concentration -- it is the last thing that
meditation can be. In fact, concentration is just the diametrically opposite. In
concentration you are very tense, focussed, looking for something. Yes,
concentration is good if you are looking for tiny things. If you are searching
for an ant, concentration is perfectly good -- but not good for God. God is so
vast, so tremendously vast. If you look with concentration you will find an ant,
not God. For God you have to be utterly open, unconcentrated, open from every
side, not searching, not looking. An unfocussed consciousness is what meditation
is -- unfocussed consciousness.
You just burn a small lamp. The light is unfocussed, it falls in every
direction. It is not going anywhere, it is simply there falling in every
direction. All directions are filled with it. Then there is a torch. A torch is
like concentration. It is focussed. When you want to look at God a torch won't
help -- a lamp will. If you are searching for an ant, perfectly good; if you are
searching for a rat, perfectly good -- the torch will do. For the small, a
focussed consciousness is needed.
In science, concentration is perfectly right. Science cannot exist without
concentration -- it is looking for the small and the smaller and the smaller. It
goes on from the smaller to the smaller to the smallest -- it is looking for the
molecule and then looking for the atom and then for the electron and then for
the neutron. It goes on looking for the smaller, the whole search is for the
smaller. So science becomes more and more concentrated and focussed.
Religion is just the opposite -- unfocussed, wide, open to all directions, to
all breezes possible. All doors, all windows open, walls dropped; you are just
an opening.
WHEN YOU SEEK TO KNOW IT, YOU
CANNOT SEE IT.
So the very effort to see it, the very desire to see it becomes a barrier.
Don't seek God. Don't seek truth. Rather, create the situation of unfocussedness
and God comes to you, it comes to you. It is there.
There is a very famous anecdote about one of the rarest women in the world,
Rabiya.
A Sufi mystic was staying with Rabiya. His name was Hussan. He must have heard
Jesus Christ's statement, 'Knock and it shall be opened unto you. Ask and it
shall be given to you. Seek and you will find it.' So every day in his morning
prayer, afternoon prayer, evening prayer, night prayer -- five times a day
Mohammedans do their prayer -- five times every day he will say to God, 'I am
knocking, Sir, and I am knocking so much. Why has it not opened up to now? I am
beating my head against your door, Sir. Open it.'
Rabiya heard it one day, Rabiya heart it the second day, Rabiya heart it the
third day, then she said, 'Hussan, when will you look? The door is open. You go
on talking nonsense -- "I am knocking, I am knocking" -- And the door is open
all the time. Look. But you are too much concerned with your knocking and asking
and desiring and seeking and you cannot see. The door is open.'
Rabiya is far more true than Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ's statement is on a
lower plane. Yes, it is good for people who have not even started searching, it
is good for the kindergarten class those who have not started searching. For
them it has to be said 'Seek, search, knock' and for them a guarantee has to be
given otherwise they will not seek -- a guarantee that you 'knock and it shall
be opened up to you. Ask and it shall be given unto you'.
Rabiya's statement is pure Zen. She says, 'Look, you fool, the door is open and
it has always been open. And just by your asking and just by your shouting you
are closing your eyes. It is only a question of opening your eyes -- the door
has always been open.'
God has always been available. God is unconditionally available.
WHEN YOU SEEK TO KNOW IT, YOU
CANNOT SEE IT.
YOU CANNOT TAKE HOLD OF IT,
BUT YOU CANNOT LOSE IT.
See the beauty of this statement. YOU CANNOT TAKE HOLD OF IT. If you want to
possess God you will not be able to. God cannot be possessed.
All that is great cannot be possessed -- and that is one of the most foolish
things man goes on doing. We want to possess. You fall in love and then you want
to possess, and by possessing you destroy love. Love is of the quality of God.
Jesus has said it exactly -- 'Love is God'. If you really want to be in love
don't try to possess it. By possessing it you kill it, you poison it. You are so
small and love is so great, how can you possess it? You can be possessed by it,
true, but you cannot possess it. The smaller cannot possess the bigger. It is so
simple but so difficult.
When we love somebody we want to possess the love, we want to possess the
beloved, the lover, we want to become completely dominant because we are afraid
somebody may take it away. But before anybody takes it away it is gone. It is
not there any more. The moment you start thinking of possessing, you have killed
it. Now there is a dead thing, a corpse. The life has disappeared.
Life cannot be possessed because life is God. Existence cannot be possessed
because existence is God.
You see a beautiful flower -- a rose -- on a bush, and you immediately take it
away from the bush. You want to possess it. You have killed it. Now you put it
in your buttonhole -- it is a dead flower, it is a corpse, it is no more
beautiful. How can a dead thing be beautiful? It is just a memory and it is
fading. It was so alive on the bush, it was so beautiful on the bush. It was so
young and so happy and there was dance in it and there was a song around it. You
killed all. Now you are carrying a dead flower in your buttonhole.
And this is what we are doing in everything. Whether it is beauty, love, God,
we want to possess.
YOU CANNOT TAKE HOLD OF IT.
-- remember --
BUT YOU CANNOT LOSE IT.
So beautiful. Yes, you cannot possess it, but there is no way to lose it
either. It is there. It is always there. If you are just silent you will start
feeling it. You have to fall in tune with it. You have to become silent so you
can listen to it. You have to become silent so the dance of God can penetrate
you, so God can vibrate in you, so God can pulsate in you. You have to drop your
rush, your hurry, your ideas to go somewhere, to reach, to become, to be this
and that. You have to stop becoming. And it is there; you cannot lose it.
IN NOT BEING ABLE TO GET IT,
YOU GET IT.
IN NOT BEING ABLE TO GET IT,
YOU GET IT. The moment you
understand that you cannot possess it, and you drop your possessiveness, it is
there -- and you have got it. The moment you understand that love cannot be
possessed, a great understanding has arisen in you. And now you will have it,
and you will have it forever. You cannot exhaust it.
But you will have it only when you have got the point that it cannot be
possessed, that there is no way to get it.
This is the Zen paradox -- Zen is the path of paradox. It says that if you want
to possess God, please don't possess him -- and you will possess him. If you
want to possess love, don't possess, and it is there and it is always yours. You
cannot lose it; it is not possible to lose it.
WHEN YOU ARE SILENT, IT SPEAKS;
WHEN YOU SPEAK, IT IS SILENT.
You cannot both speak. Martin Buber has made the word 'dialogue' very, very
prevalent in the Western world. It is a great insight but not yet of the height
of Zen. Martin Buber says that prayer is a dialogue. In the dialogue you speak
to God, God speaks to you. A dialogue has to have two. Of course, a dialogue is
an 'I-thou' relationship. It is a relationship. You relate.
Zen says that this is not possible. If you speak, God is silent. When you are
speaking and creating noise in your head, he disappears -- because his voice is
so still and so small, so silent, that it can be heard only when you are utterly
silent. It is not a dialogue, it is a passive listening.
Either you speak' and God is not there, or God speaks and you are not there. If
you dissolve, disappear, then you hear him. Then he is speaking from everywhere
-- from every chirping of every bird and from every murmur of every brook and
from every wind passing through every pine. He is everywhere -- but you fall
silent.
WHEN YOU ARE SILENT, IT SPEAKS;
WHEN YOU SPEAK, IT IS SILENT.
THE GREAT GATE IS WIDE OPEN TO BESTOW ALMS,
AND NO CROWD IS BLOCKING THE WAY.
There is no competition, there is nobody blocking your way, there are no
competitors. You need not be in a hurry. You need not make any effort to grab.
There is nobody competing with you and there is nobody standing in front of you
-- only God, only God. You can relax. You need not be afraid that you will miss
it. You cannot miss it in the very nature of things. You cannot lose him. You
relax.
All these statements are just to help you to relax. God cannot be lost --
relax. There is nobody blocking the way -- relax. There is no hurry because God
is not something in time -- relax. There is nowhere to go because God is not
distant in some star -- relax. You cannot miss in the very nature of things --
relax.
The whole message of all these paradoxical statements is -- relax. It can be
condensed into one thing -- relax. Don't seek, don't search, don't ask, don't
knock, don't demand -- relax. If you relax, it comes. If you relax, it is there.
If you relax, you start vibrating with it.
That's what Zen calls satori... utter relaxation of your being; a state of your
consciousness where there is no becoming left; when you are not an achiever any
more; when you are not going anywhere; when there is no goal; when all goals
have disappeared and all purposes have been left behind; when you are, simply
are. In that moment of isness you dissolve into totality and a new tick arises
that has never been there. That tick is called satori, samadhi, enlightenment.
It can happen in any situation -- whenever you fall in tune with the whole.
The last thing. Zen is non-serious. Zen has a tremendous sense of humour. No
other religion has evolved so much that it can have that sense of humour. Zen
has laughter in it. Zen is festive. Zen's spirit is that of celebration.
Other religions are very serious -- as if to achieve God is a great work, as if
somebody is going to take God away from them, as if God is trying to hide; as if
God is creating hurdles knowingly, deliberately; as if there is great
competition and God is not enough for all; as if God is money and there is not
enough for all. If you don't grab it immediately before others, others will
grab. These are very serious people, money-minded people, goal-oriented people
-- but not really religious.
God is so big, so huge, so enormous. It is the totality of existence -- who can
exhaust it? There is no need to be afraid that somebody will possess it before
you and then what will you do? You will be lost forever. There is no struggle,
no competition. And there is eternal time available. Don't be in a hurry and
don't be serious.
Long faces are not truly religious faces. They are simply saying they have not
understood it -- otherwise they will have a good laugh. Laughter is very unique
to Zen and because of laughter I say it is the highest religion up to now. It
does not make your life ugly, it does not make you crippled -- it makes you
dance, it makes you enjoy.
A small boy was taken for the first time to see Madam Tussaud's world-famous
waxworks show in London. He was plainly depressed by the whole thing. His mother
sought to enlighten him.
'You see, dear, all these men and women are famous people who lived, a long
time ago. They are all dead now.'
The lad's gloom deepened, and he muttered, 'So, this is heaven!'
That is the danger. If you go to a Christian heaven you will be in something
like that. Just think of the horrible nightmare of living with Christian saints.
Somebody asked a Zen Master why there were not so many saints on earth. He
laughed and he said, 'They are good in heaven because it is very difficult to
live with them. We are fortunate that they are not on earth. Let them be in
heaven.'
It is good. Just imagine living with a saint. You will start committing
suicide.
Zen brings laughter and a new breeze into religion. Zen makes joking religious.
It is a totally different kind of approach -- more healthy, more natural.
These are the fundamentals. I may have told you very fast.
Listen to this story.
'Pop' Gabardine, coach of a Midwestern football team, had seen his charges
trampled eight Saturday afternoons in a row, the last time by a humiliating
score of fifty-two to zero.
When the squad regathered the following Monday, Pop said bitterly, 'For the
last game of the season, we might as well forget all the trick plays I tried to
teach you dimwits. We're going back to fundamentals. Let's go. Lesson number
one: this object I am holding is known as a football. Lesson number two.... '
At this point Coach Gabardine was interrupted by a worried fullback in the
front row, who pleaded, 'Hey, Pop, not so fast.'
I have gone very fast but I hope you people here are not dimwits. I trust your
intelligence.
By OSHO...
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