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oshothe vigyana bhairava tantra vol one | ||
the book of the secrets : a new commentary : talks given from 01/10/1972 pm to 01/03/1973 pm | ||
the vigyana bhairava tantra vol one chapter twenty three | ||
several more looking methods 16 december 1972 pm in woodlands bombay | ||
SIMPLY BY LOOKING INTO THE BLUE SKY BEYOND
CLOUDS, THE SERENITY. LISTEN WHILE THE
ULTIMATE MYSTICAL TEACHING IS IMPARTED. EYES STILL, WITHOUT BLINKING, AT ONCE BECOME
ABSOLUTELY FREE. AT THE EDGE OF A
DEEP WELL LOOK STEADILY INTO ITS DEPTHS UNTIL -- THE WONDROUSNESS. LOOK UPON SOME
OBJECT, THEN SLOWLY WITHDRAW YOUR SIGHT FROM IT, THEN SLOWLY WITHDRAW YOUR THOUGHT FROM
IT. THEN. We live on the
surface of ourselves -- just at the fringe, the boundary. The senses are just on the
boundary and your consciousness is way deep down at the center. We live in the senses;
that is natural. But that is not the ultimate flowering, it is just the beginning. And
when we are living in the senses, we are basically concerned with objects, because senses
are irrelevant unless there is concern with some object of enjoyment. For example, eyes
are useless unless there is something to be seen, ears are useless unless there is
something to be heard, and hands are useless unless there is something to be touched. We live in the
senses; therefore, we have to live in objects. The senses are just on the boundary of the
being, in the body, and objects are not even on the boundary: they are beyond the
boundary. So three points have to be understood before we enter the techniques. First, the
consciousness is at the center. Second, the senses through which the consciousness moves
out are at the boundary. And third, the objects in the world to which the consciousness
moves, through the senses, are beyond the boundary. These three things have to be
remembered: consciousness at the center, senses at the boundary and objects beyond the
boundary. Try to understand it clearly, because then the techniques will be very simple. Look at it from
many directions. One: senses are just in between, just in the middle. At one side is
consciousness, at another side is the world of objects. Senses are just in the middle --
between the two. From the senses you can move either way: either you can go to the objects
or you can go to the center. Either way the distance is the same. From the senses, doors
open both ways -- move to the objects or move to the center. You are at the
senses. That is why one of the most famous Zen Masters, Bokuju, has said that NIRVANA and
the world are the same distance away. So do not think that the nirvana is very far away.
The world and the nirvana, this world and that other world, are both at the same distance. This saying has
created much confusion because we feel that nirvana is very, very far away - that Moksha,
liberation, the kingdom of God, is very, very far away. We feel that the world is just
near, just here. But Bokuju says, and he says rightly, that both are at the same distance. The world is here,
and nirvana is also here. The world is near, and nirvana is also near, For nirvana you
have to move inwards, for the objects you have to move outwards; the distance is the same.
From my eyes, my center is just as near as you are near me. I can see you if I move
outward, I can see myself if I move inward. And we are at the doors of the senses, but
naturally, the bodily needs are such that consciousness moves outwards. You need food, you
need water to drink, you need a house where to live. These are your bodily needs and these
can only be found in the world, so quite naturally, consciousness moves through the senses
toward the world. Unless you create a need which can only be fulfilled when you move
inward, you will never move inward. For example, if a
child were born self-sufficient, if he didn't need any food, he would not look at his
mother at all. The mother would become irrelevant, meaningless, because for the child the
mother is not the meaning: food is the meaning. The mother is his first food, and because
the mother gives him food and satisfies a basic need, without which he will die, he starts
loving the mother. That love comes secondly, as a shadow, because the mother is fulfilling
a basic need. So those mothers
who are feeding their children through bottles should not expect much love because for the
child food is the need, not the mother. The mother will come into his being, enter into
his being only through food. That is why food and love are deeply related-very, very
deeply related. If your love need is fulfilled, you will need less food. If your love need
is not fulfilled, you will need more food. So those who love and who are loved will not
gather much fat. There are other reasons also, but this is one of the most basic. They
will not eat much. If love is not fulfilled, then food becomes a substitute. Then they
will eat much. For the child, food
is the basic need. But if a child should be born who can be self-sufficient, who does not
need any food, who does not need any outward help to be alive, he will not move in the
world at all. Do you think he will move? There would be no need. And unless a need is
there, the energy will never move. We move outwardly not because we are sinners. We move
outwardly because we have needs which can be fulfilled only through objects-which can be
gained if we move in the world of objects. Why do you not move
inward? Because you have not yet created the need to move inward. Once the need is there,
it is as easy to move inward as to move outward. What is that need? That need is concerned
with religion. You cannot be religious unless that need is there. How is that need
created? By what process does one become aware of a deep need which helps you move inward? Three things are to
be remembered. Firstly, death. Remember, all life-needs force you to move outward. If you
want to move inward, death must become a basic concern; otherwise you cannot move inward.
That is why it happened that persons like Buddha, who became deeply conscious of death,
started moving inward. Only when you become aware of death will you create the need to
look back. Life looks outward.
Unless you become aware of death, religion is meaningless for you. That is why animals
have no religion. They are alive, they are as much alive as man, or even more, but they
cannot be conscious of death, they cannot conceive of death, they cannot see death in the
future. They see that others are dying, but it never occurs to the animal mind that this
death is an indication of his death also. For the animal mind
death always occurs to others. And if for you also death is just something which happens
to others, you still live in the animal mind. If you are not aware of death, you have not
yet become man. That is the basic difference between animal and man-because animal cannot
be aware of death, only man can be. If you are not aware of death you are not a man yet,
and only man creates the need to move inward. To me, man means
awareness of death. I am not saying become afraid of death; that is not awareness. Just be
aware of the fact that death is coming nearer and nearer and you have to be prepared for
it. Life has its own
needs; death creates its own needs. That is why younger societies are irreligious --
because younger societies are not yet aware of the phenomenon of death; it has not become
a central concern for them. An older society -- for example, India, one of the oldest
societies in existence -- is so much aware of death.
Because of that awareness, deep down India is religious. So the first thing:
become aware of death. Think about it, look at it, contemplate it. Do not be afraid, do
not escape the fact. It is there and you cannot escape it! It has come into existence with
you. Your death is born
with you; now you cannot escape it. You have hidden it in yourself -- become aware of it.
The moment you become aware that you are going to die, that death is certain, your total
mind will start looking in a different dimension. Then food is a basic need for the body,
but not for the being, because even if you get food death will occur. Food cannot protect
you from death, food can only postpone. Food can help you to postpone. If you get a good
shelter, a good house, it will not protect you from death. it will only help you to die
conveniently, comfortably. And death, whether it happens comfortably or uncomfortably, is
the same. In life you may be
poor or rich, but death is the great equalizer. The greatest communism is in death.
Howsoever you live, it makes no difference; death happens equally. In life, equality is
impossible; in death, inequality is impossible. Become aware of it, contemplate it. And it
is not only that death is certain somewhere in the future: with the idea that it is very
far away, you will again not be able to contemplate it. The mind has a very small range;
the focus of the mind is very small. You cannot think beyond thirty years. After thirty
years there will be death... it is as if you are not going to die. Thirty years is so
long, the distance is so much, it is as if death is not going to occur. If you want to
contemplate death, know another fact about it: it can occur the next moment; it is
possible the very next moment. You may not be able to hear my whole sentence, I may not be
able to complete it. My mother's father used to tell me that when I was born he consulted
one astrologer, one of the best known astrologers of those days. The astrologer was to
make my KUNDALI -- birth chart. But the astrologer studied it and he said, "If this
child survives after seven years, only then will I make the chart. It seems impossible
that he can survive for more than seven years, so it is useless. If the child is going to
die in seven years it is useless to make the kundali; it will be of no use. And it has
been my habit," the astrologer said, "that unless I am certain that the kundali
will be useful I never make it." So he didn't make it. Fortunately, or
unfortunately, I survived. Then my mother's father went to the astrologer, but he was
dead, so he never could make my kundali. He was dead, and I have been constantly wondering
about this. He was aware of the fact that this child may die, but he was not aware of the
fact that he may die. He was not aware! It seems that he was absolutely unconcerned -- and
he was no ordinary man. But no one is concerned with his own death. Knowingly, cunningly,
we are not concerned with it because it creates a fear. So I have always suspected that
that astrologer might have never looked at his own kundali; otherwise he would have become
aware. Death is possible
the very next moment, but the mind will not believe it. I say it and your mind will say,
"No! How is it possible the next moment? It is far away." But that is a trick.
If you postpone, you cannot contemplate. It must be so near that you can focus on it. And
when I say that the next moment it is possible, I mean it. It can happen, and whenever it
will happen it will be the next moment. Just before it, you could not have conceived that
it was going to happen. A person is dying:
just a moment before he could never have thought that death is so near. It always happens
in the next moment -- remember. It has always happened that way, and this will be the way
always. It always happens in the next moment. Bring it near so that you can focus on it,
and that very focusing will help you to enter in, a new need will be created. Secondly, you go on
living. You go on creating artificial meanings and purposes for this very moment. You
never think of your life as a whole, whether it has any meaning or not. You go on creating
new meanings, and you push yourself on with those meanings. That is why a poor man lives a
more meaningful life than a rich man -- because a poor man has many things to get, and
that gives a meaning to his life. If you are really rich, it means you have everything
that is possible and this world cannot offer anything to you. Then your life becomes
meaningless. Now you cannot create any meaning for this moment, for this day, to help you
live. That is why the richer a society, the more affluent a culture, the more
meaninglessness is felt. Poorer societies never feel meaninglessness. A poor man is
concerned with having a house. For years together he will work for it. His life has a
meaning; something has to be achieved. And when he gets the house he will be happy for a
few days at least, but then bigger houses are there... So he will go on moving, doing this
and that, never thinking about his life as a whole, whether it has any meaning or not. He
never takes life as a whole. Just imagine that
you have everything -- the house, the car that you long for, and all your dreams are
fulfilled. So now what? Just imagine that whatsoever you need is there, you have it. Now
what? Suddenly meaning disappears. You are standing on an abyss; nothing can be done. You
become meaningless. You are already meaningless, just not aware. Even if you get the whole
world, then what? What is fulfilled? Alexander was
coming to India, and he met a great saint, Diogenes. Diogenes was one of the most
penetrating minds ever born. He lived naked like Mahavir; he is the Mahavir of Greek
civilization and culture. He left everything, renounced everything, not because through
renouncing things he was going to get anything -- that is not real renouncing, not
authentic renunciation. If you renounce something to get something, that is a bargain. If
you think that you are going to have some reservation in heaven and that is why you
renounce, it is not renunciation. If you renounce the bodily pleasures to have spiritual
pleasures, this is not renunciation. Diogenes renounced
everything, not because out of it he was going to get something. He renounced just to see
if when he has nothing, whether there is any meaning or not. He thought that if one
possesses nothing, if even then one has a meaning, a purpose, a destiny, then death cannot
annihilate anything, because death can annihilate only a possessions and the body is also
possession. He left everything. He had only one thing: a wooden bowl out of which to drink
water. He thought, "This is not much of a possession." Then one day he saw a
child drinking water with his hands. He immediately threw away the bowl. He said, "If
a child can drink water with his hands, am I more weak than a child?" When Alexander was
coming to India to conquer, to make a world empire, somebody informed him that just on the
way, where he would be stopping, there lived a great sage who was just the opposite of
him. He was told, "You are going to make a world empire, and he has even thrown away
his bowl because he says that as he is happy without it, why carry this burden? And you
say that unless the whole world becomes your empire, you cannot be happy. So he is just at
the opposite pole, and it would be good if you meet him." Alexander was
fascinated. It happens that the opposite always fascinates. The opposite always
fascinates; it has a deep sexual attraction. Just a man is attracted to woman or woman is
attracted to man, there is the same attraction with the opposite. Alexander could not
by-pass Diogenes, but it was not good for him to go to Diogenes, and it was impossible
that Diogenes would come to him -- there was no solution. Diogenes was
informed. Many, many messengers came to inform him that "The Great Alexander is
passing this way. It would be good if you meet him." He said, "The Great
Alexander? Who has said this to you! I think he himself has. So tell your Great Alexander
that he has nothing to give to me, and there is no need for him to meet me -- and I am a
very small man." He used to say, "Really, I am a dog, not a man at all -- just a
dog, so there is no need. It is below his dignity to meet this dog." Then Alexander had
to come. Diogenes is reported to have said, "I hear you are going to win the whole
world, so I thought, I closed my eyes and thought, 'Okay! If I have won the whole world,
then what?' This has been my problem constantly: if I have won the whole world, then
what?" It is reported that Alexander, after hearing this, became very sad. "Then
what?" he said to Diogenes. "Do not talk such things. You make me very
sad." Diogenes said,
"But you will become very sad when you win the whole world. What can I do? I am just
imagining, and I have come to conclude that this is useless. You are making a suicidal
effort. You yourself are trying to win the whole world -- so then what? If you succeed,
then what? " Alexander returned
from Diogenes very disturbed, upset, sad. He said to his companions, "This man is
very dangerous. He has shattered my dreams." And he could never forget, could never
forgive Diogenes. The day he died, he remembered him again, and he said, "It may be
that that fellow was right: then what ?" So the next thing
is to remember always that whatsoever you are doing, whatsoever you are achieving,
remember to ask, "If I succeed, then what?" Is there any meaning in it all, or
is there just some artificial meaning given by you only to divide, to create an illusion
around you so that you feel you are doing something worthwhile -- and all the time you are
really wasting life and energy, not doing anything worthwhile! There is only one thing
worthwhile: if you can become happy without anything, without any dependence: if you can
be blissful alone, totally alone. If nothing is needed for your bliss, only then can you
be blissful; otherwise you will be in misery, always in misery. Dependence is
misery, and those who depend on possessions, those who depend on accumulated knowledge,
those who depend on this or that, they are helping their own misery to become accumulated
more and more. So the next point to remember is to ask whether you have any meaning, or
whether you are just floating along without any meaning. Are you just making believe that
this or that is the meaning of your existence? One man used to
come to me. He used to say that if his son gets into college, that would be all and he
would be very happy. He was a poor man, a very ordinary clerk, and that was the only
dream, that his son would get into college. Then the son got into college. Now the son has
become a forest official. A few months back the son was here and he told me, "I am
getting only six hundred rupees per month. I have two children and this is my only dream,
that they can get a good education; that is all. I am working hard. If they can be well
educated and if I can send one of my children to some foreign country to study, that is
all I ask." His father is no
more; he has died. This was his meaning in life, his purpose -- to make his boy educated
and well placed. Now the boy is well placed, and now the boy has the same purpose, to help
his children become educated and well placed. And he will die, and those children will go
on doing the same nonsense. What is the meaning
of all this? What are you doing? Just passing time? Just destroying life? Or have you got
some authentic meaning which you can say makes you happy, blissful? This is the second
consideration which will turn you inward. And thirdly, man
goes on forgetting. You go on forgetting things. You were angry yesterday, and you
repented it. Now you have forgotten, and if the same stimulus is given again, you will be
angry again. This has been so for your whole life: you go on repeating the same things. It is said that it
is very extraordinary to find a man who learns through life -- very rare. Really, no one
learns. If you learn, then you cannot commit the same mistake twice. But you go on
committing the same thing again and again. Rather, the more you commit, the more you
become prone to commit it. You are angry again and again, and again and again you repent
it, and you have not learned anything. Given the stimulus, you will be angry, and you will
do the same madness, and then you will repent again -- that is also part of it. And then
you will again be ready to be stimulated and to be angry. The third thing: if
you want to turn in, learn! Whatsoever you are doing, learn through it. Take the essential
out of it. Look back at what have you been doing with your life and your energy and your
time. The same mistakes, the same foolishnesses, the same stupidities, again and again. So you move in a
wheel. However, it is not good to say that you move the wheel: rather, the wheel moves
you. Mechanically, you go on and on and on. That is why in India we have called the world
SANSAR. SANSAR means the wheel which goes on, and you are just clinging to some spoke on
it and you go on moving. Unless you learn
something about this wheel, this vicious circle, this sansar, unless you learn something
about it, you will not leave the spoke and jump out of it. So three words, three key
words: Death: make it a
constant contemplation. Meaning: go on
searching for it in your life. And learn: learn
through your life, because there is no other learning. Scriptures won't give you anything. If your own life
cannot give you something, nothing can give it to you. Learn through your own life,
conclude through it. What have you been doing with yourself? If you are in a wheel, jump
out of it. But to know that you are in a wheel, you will have to go deep into
understanding and learning. These three things will help you to turn in. Now the techniques: SIMPLY BY LOOKING INTO THE BLUE
SKY BEYOND CLOUDS, THE SERENITY. That is why I have
said so many things -- because the techniques are very easy, and you can do them and
nothing will result. Then you will say, "What type of techniques are these? We can do
them, they are so simple. SIMPLY BY LOOKING INTO THE SKY, THE BLUE SKY, BEYOND THE CLOUDS,
THE SERENITY: one will become silent and serene, fulfilled." You can look at the
blue sky beyond the clouds and nothing will happen. Then you will say, "What type of
technique is this? Shiva is not talking rationally, reasonably. He is saying anything,
whatsoever comes to his mind. What kind of technique is this -- SIMPLY BY LOOKING INTO THE
BLUE SKY BEYOND CLOUDS, THE SERENITY. One will become serene!" But if you
remember: death, meaning, learning, this technique will help you immediately to turn in.
LOOKING INTO THE BLUE SKY BEYOND CLOUDS... Just looking, not thinking. The sky is
infinite; it ends nowhere. Just look into it. There is no object; that is why the sky is
chosen. The sky is not an object. Linguistically it is; existentially, the sky is not an
object because an object begins and ends. You can go around an object; you cannot go
around the sky. You are in the sky, but you cannot go around it. So you may be the object
for the sky, but the sky cannot be your object. You can look into it, but you cannot look
at it, and that looking into it goes on and on... it never ends. So look into the
blue sky and go on looking. The object is infinite, there is no boundary to it. Do not
think about it; do not say it is beautiful. Do not say, "How lovely!" Do not
appreciate the color; do not start thinking. If you start thinking, you have stopped. Now
your eyes are not moving into the blue, the infinite blue. Just move, just look -- do not
think. Do not create words; they will become barriers. Not even "blue sky"
should be said. Do not verbalize. There should be
just a pure, innocent look into the blue sky. It never ends. You will go on and on and on
and on, and suddenly, because there is no object, just a vacuum, suddenly you will become
aware of yourself. Why? Because if there is any vacuum your senses become useless. Senses
are only useful if there is an object. If you are looking
at a flower, then you are looking at something -- the flower is there. The sky is not
there. What do we mean by a sky? That which is not there. Sky means the space. All objects
are in the sky, but the sky is not an object. It is just the vacuum, the space in which
objects can exist. The sky itself is just pure emptiness. Look at this pure emptiness.
That is why the sutra says: BEYOND THE CLOUDS. Because clouds are not the sky, they are
objects floating in the sky. You can look at the clouds, but that will not help. Look into
the blue sky -- not at the stars, not at the moon, not at the clouds, but at
objectlessness, emptiness. Look into it. What will happen?
In emptiness, there is no object to be grasped by the senses. Because there is no object
to be grasped, clung to, senses become futile. And if you are looking into the blue sky
without thinking, without thinking, suddenly you will feel that everything has
disappeared; there is nothing. In that disappearance you will become aware of yourself.
Looking into this emptiness, you will become empty. Why? Because your eyes are like a
mirror. Whatsoever is before them is reflected. I see you and you are sad -- then a sudden
sadness enters into me. If a sad person enters into your room, you become sad. What has
happened? You have looked at sadness. You are like a mirror: the sadness is reflected in
you. Someone laughs
heartily -- suddenly you feel a laughter coming to you also. It has become infectious.
What has happened? You are like a mirror, you are reflecting things. You look at a
beautiful object -- it is reflected in you. You look at an ugly object -- it is reflected
in you. Whatsoever you are seeing penetrates deep into you. It becomes part of your
consciousness. If you are looking
into the emptiness, there is nothing to be reflected - or only the blue infinite sky. If
it is reflected, if you feel the blue infinite sky within, you will become serene, you
will find serenity. That is there. And if really you can conceive of emptiness - where
sky, blue, everything disappears: just at emptiness - inside also emptiness will be
reflected. And in emptiness, how can you be worried, how can you be tense? In emptiness, how
can the mind function? It stops; it disappears. In the disappearance of the mind - the
mind that is tense, worried, filled with thoughts that are relevant, irrelevant - in that
disappearance of the mind, THE SERENITY. One thing more.
Emptiness, if reflected in, becomes desirelessness. Desire is tension. You desire and you
become worried. You look at a beautiful woman -- a sudden desire arises. You look at a
beautiful house -- you want to possess it. You look at a beautiful car just passing by
your side -- you want to be in it, you want to drive it. A desire has come in, and with
the desire mind becomes worried: "How to get it? What to do to get it?" The mind
becomes frustrated or hopeless or hopeful, but it is all dreaming. Many things can happen. When desire is
there, you are disturbed. The mind is shattered into fragments, and many plans, dreams,
projections start; you become mad. Desire is the seed of madness. But emptiness is
not an object; it is just emptiness. When you look at emptiness, no desire arises; it
cannot arise. You do not want to possess emptiness, you do not want to love emptiness, you
do not want to make a house out of it. Emptiness? You cannot do anything with it! All
movement of the mind stops, no desire arises, and with the non-arising of desire, THE
SERENITY. You become silent, serene. A sudden peace explodes in you. You have become like
the sky. Another thing.
Whatsoever you contemplate, you become like it, you become that, because mind can take
infinite forms. Whatsoever you desire, your mind takes its form, you become it. That is
why a person who is just after riches, gold, after money, his mind becomes just a treasure
- nothing else. Shake him, and you will feel the rupees inside - the sound of rupees,
nothing else. Whatsoever you desire, you become that. So be conscious of what you are
desiring because you are becoming that. The sky is the most
empty thing. It is just near you and it costs nothing, and you do not have to go somewhere
-- to the Himalayas or to Tibet -- to find the sky. They have destroyed everything,
technology has destroyed everything, but the sky is still there; you can use it. Use it
before they destroy it -- any day they will destroy it. Look, penetrate into it. And the
look must be a non-thinking one, remember this. Then you will feel the same sky within,
the same dimension within, the same space and blueness and emptiness. That is why Shiva
says, SIMPLY. SIMPLY BY LOOKING
INTO THE BLUE SKY BEYOND CLOUDS, THE SERENITY. The next technique: LISTEN WHILE THE ULTIMATE
MYSTICAL TEACHING IS IMPARTED. EYES STILL, WITHOUT WINKING, AT ONCE BECOME ABSOLUTELY
FREE." LISTEN WHILE THE ULTIMATE MYSTICAL TEACHING IS IMPARTED. This is a secret method. In this esoteric tantra, the master gives you the teaching secretly, the doctrine secretly -- or the mantra secretly. When the disciple is ready, then the mantra, or the supreme secret, will be imparted, communicated to him, privately. Just in his ear it will be whispered. This technique is concerned with that whispering. LISTEN WHILE THE
ULTIMATE MYSTICAL TEACHING IS IMPARTED. When the master has
decided that now you are ready and the secret of his own experience can be communicated,
when the moment has come when he can say to you that which is unsayable, then this
technique has to be used. EYES STILL, WITHOUT WINKING, AT ONCE BECOME ABSOLUTELY FREE.
When master, is imparting his secret to you in your ear, whispering it, let your eyes be
totally still: no movement of the eyes. That means the mind should be quiet, thoughtless. No winking -- not
even a slight movement, because that will show a disturbance within. Just become an empty
ear with no movement within. The consciousness is just waiting to be impregnated, just
open, receptive, passive... no activity on its own part. And when this will happen, this
moment when you are totally empty, not thinking anything but just waiting... not waiting
for something, because then it will become thinking, not waiting for something but just
waiting; when this static moment, this non-dynamic moment will happen; when everything has
stopped, time is not flowing and mind is totally vacant -- it becomes no-mind. Only into a
no-mind can a master impart. And he is not going
to give a very long discourse: he will give just one or two or three words. In that
silence those one, two or three words will penetrate to your very core, to the very
center, and they will become a seed there. In this passive awareness, in this silence, AT
ONCE BECOME ABSOLUTELY FREE. One can become free
only by becoming free of the mind; there is no other freedom. Freedom from the mind is the
only freedom. Mind is the bondage, the slavery, the servitude. So a disciple has to wait
with his master for the right moment when he will call him and impart. He is not to ask,
because asking means desire. He is not to expect, because expectation means conditions,
desire, mind. He is just to wait. And when he will be ready, when his waiting will become
total, the master can do anything. Sometimes the
master can do very trivial things, and the thing will happen. And ordinarily, even if a
Shiva goes on talking about one hundred and twelve methods, nothing will happen because
the preparation is not there. You can throw seeds on stones, but nothing will happen. The
fault is not of the seeds. You can throw a seed out of season, but nothing will happen.
The fault is not of the seed. The right season is needed, the right moment is needed, the
right soil is needed. Only then will the seed become alive and transform. So sometimes very
trivial things work. For example, Lin Chi became enlightened while he was just sitting on
his master's verandah - on the verandah of his master, and the Master came out and just
laughed. He looked at Lin Chi - into his eyes - and laughed uproariously. Lin Chi started
laughing, bowed down, and left. But he had been waiting there for six years: that verandah
was his abode for six years. The master would come day after day, month after month, and he would not even look at him. And Lin Chi was waiting there. Then after two years, for the first time he looked at him. Then two more years passed, and for the first time he patted him. Then Lin Chi waited and waited, and after six years, one day suddenly he came out, stared into Lin Chi's eyes, and Lin Chi must have done this technique: LISTEN WHILE THE
ULTIMATE MYSTICAL TEACHING IS IMPARTED. EYES STILL, WITHOUT WINKING, AT ONCE BECOME
ABSOLUTELY FREE. The master looked
and used laughter as a medium. He was a great master. Really, words were not needed, just
laughter. Suddenly there was that laughter, and something happened in Lin Chi. He bowed
down, laughed, left, and told everyone that now he was no more, that he was liberated,
free. He was no more: that is what liberation means. You are not liberated. You are
liberated from yourself. Lin Chi used to
tell how it happened. For six years he was waiting. It was a long waiting, a patient
waiting. He was just waiting on the verandah, and every day the master would come. And he
would wait for the right moment -- when he would become ready, then the master would do
something. Just by waiting for six years, you will fall into meditation. What can you do?
He might have thought for a few days about old things, but if you do not give new food
every day to the mind, by and by it stops. How long can you chew again and again on the
same thing? He might have been
thinking about past things, and by and by, because no new stimulus was given, thinking
stopped. He was not allowed to read, he was not allowed to talk, he was not allowed to
move and meet anyone. He was just allowed to fulfill the basic bodily needs and wait on
the verandah. Silently he waited,
day after day -- day in, day out, day and night. Summer would come and pass away, and
winter would come and pass away, and there would be rain and it would pass away: he must
have forgotten time. He must have forgotten for how many days he had been there. And then
one day suddenly the master appeared, and he looked deeply into his eyes. Lin Chi's eyes
must have suddenly become static, non-dynamic. This was the moment; six years were wasted
for this. There was no movement of the eyes, because a single movement and he may miss.
Everything must have become silent -- and then suddenly, the uproarious laughter: the
master began laughing madly. That laughter must have been heard deep down at the very
core; it must have reached. So when Lin Chi was
asked, "What happened to you?" he said, "When my master laughed, suddenly I
recognized that the whole world is just a joke. In his laughter, this was the message: The
whole world is just a joke, just a drama. An seriousness disappeared. And if the whole
world is just a joke, who is in bondage? And who needs to be free?" So Lin Chi said,
"There was no bondage at all. I was thinking that I was bound, and that is why I was
trying to be free, and then suddenly the master laughed and the bondage fell away." Sometimes it has
happened with such things; you can never conceive of how it was possible. There are many
Zen stories... One Zen master became aware when the gong was beaten. Just while he was
hearing the gong being beaten, the sound, something shattered in him. One Zen nun became
aware, enlightened, while she was carrying two pails of water. Suddenly the bamboo broke,
and the earthen pots fell down. The sound, the breaking of the pots and the water flowing
out of them, and she became enlightened. What happened? You
can break many pots, but nothing will happen. A right moment had come. She was coming
back. Her master had said, "This night I am going to give you the secret, so go and
take a bath, and bring two pails of water for me. I will take a bath and impart to you the
secret for which you have been waiting." She must have felt ecstatic -- the moment
had come. She took a bath, filled the pots, and carried them back. It was a full-moon
night, and just when she was passing on the footpath from the river to the ashram,
suddenly the bamboo broke. When she reached, the master was waiting, and he looked at her
and he said, "Now there is no need, it has happened. Now I have nothing to convey.
You have already received." That old nun used
to say, "With that bamboo breaking, something broke in me -- something broke in me
also. Those pails falling down, those broken earthen pots, and I saw my body broken. I
looked at the moon. Everything was silent, serene, and I became silent and serene. From
that moment, I have not been, I am no more." This is what liberation, freedom means. The next technique: AT THE EDGE OF A DEEP WELL LOOK
STEADILY INTO ITS DEPTHS UNTIL -- THE WONDROUSNESS. The techniques are
similar, with a slight difference. AT THE EDGE OF A DEEP WELL LOOK STEADILY INTO ITS
DEPTHS UNTIL -- THE WONDROUSNESS. Look into a deep well. The well will be reflected in
you. Forget thinking completely; stop thinking completely. Just go on looking into the
depth. Now they say mind has its own depth, like a well. Now in the West, they are
developing depth psychology. They say mind is not just a surface. It is just a beginning;
there are depths -- many depths, hidden depths. Look into a well
without thinking. The depth will be reflected in you, the well will become just an outer
symbol of the inner depth. And go on looking UNTIL - THE WONDROUSNESS, until you feel
wonder-filled. Do not stop before
this moment. Go on looking, go on looking, go on looking, day after day, month after
month. Just go to a well, look deep, with no thoughts moving in the mind. Just meditate.
Just meditate on the depth: meditate the depth, become one with it. Go on meditating; one
day your thoughts will not be there. Any moment it can happen. Suddenly you will feel you
have the same well within you, the same depth. And then a strange, very strange feeling
will come to you: you will feel wonder-filled. Chuang Tzu was passing over a bridge with
his master, Lao Tsu. Lao Tsu is reported to have said to Chuang Tzu, "Remain here. Go
on looking down from this bridge to the river until the river stops and the bridge starts
flowing. Then come to me." The river is flowing; the bridge never flows. But Chuang
Tzu was given this meditation - to wait on this bridge. It is said he made a hut on the
bridge and remained there. Months passed... he would just sit on the bridge, looking down
for the moment when the river would stop and the bridge would flow. Then he would go to
the master. One day it
happened: the river stopped and the bridge started flowing. How can it happen? If thought
stops completely, then anything is possible, because really, it is fixedness of thought
which says that the river is flowing and the bridge is static. This is just relative -
just relative! Einstein says, and
physics says, that everything is relative. You are traveling in a train, a fast train.
What happens? The trees flow by, they run by. And if the train is really smooth and you do
not feel that the train is running, you are just looking through the windows, the trees
are moving, not the train. Einstein has said
that if in space two trains are running, or two spaceships are running side by side with
the same speed, you will not be able to feel that they are moving. You can feel a moving
train because you see the static things by the side. If there is nothing - for example, if
the trees are also moving in the same direction with the same speed - you will feel
static. Or when a train passes in the opposite direction, your speed is doubled. You feel
your train has become faster. It has not become
faster. It is the same train with the same speed, but a train going in the opposite
direction gives you the feeling of double speed. If speed is relative, then it is just a
fixedness of the mind to think that the river is flowing and the bridge is static. Continuously
meditating, meditating, meditating, Chuang Tzu came to realize that everything is
relative. The river is flowing because you take the bridge as static. The bridge is also
flowing deep down. Nothing is static in this world. Atoms are moving, electrons are
moving; the bridge is a constant movement within. Everything is flowing; the bridge is
also flowing. Chuang Tzu must
have had a glimpse of the atomic structure of the bridge. Now they say this wall which
looks static is not static. Movement is there, every electron is running, but the movement
is so fast you cannot see it. That is why you feel it as static. If this fan goes on
with a faster movement, faster and faster, you will not be able to see its wings, the
spaces between them. You will not be able to see this. And if it moves with the speed of
light, you will see simply one circular disc that is static. Nothing will be moving in it
because eyes cannot catch that fast movement. So Chuang Tzu must
have had a glimpse of the atomic structure of the bridge. He waited and waited, and the
fixed mind dissolved. Then he saw that the bridge was flowing - and the movement was so
fast that the river was just static in comparison to it. He came running to Lao Tsu and
Lao Tsu said, "Okay! Now do not ask me. The thing has happened to you." What had
happened? No-mind had happened. In this technique: AT THE EDGE OF A DEEP WELL LOOK STEADILY INTO ITS DEPTH UNTIL - THE WONDROUSNESS. When you feel
wonder-filled, when the mystery descends upon you, when mind is no more but simply mystery
- a milieu of mystery -- then you will be capable of knowing yourself. Another technique: 36 36 LOOK UPON SOME OBJECT, THEN
SLOWLY WITHDRAW YOUR SIGHT FROM IT, THEN SLOWLY WITHDRAW YOUR THOUGHT FROM IT. THEN. Look upon some
object. Look at a flower, but remember what that LOOK means. Look! Do not think. I need
not repeat it. Always remember that look means: look, do not think. If you think, it is
not a look; then you have contaminated everything. It must be a pure look, a simple look. LOOK UPON SOME
OBJECT. Look at a flower,- a roseflower. THEN SLOWLY WITHDRAW YOUR SIGHT FROM IT - very
slowly. The flower is there -- first look at it. Drop thinking; go on looking. When you
feel that now there is no thought, simply the flower is there in your mind, nothing else,
now slightly move your eyes away. By and by the flower recedes, goes out of focus, but the
image will remain with you. The object will have gone out of focus; you will have turned
your look away. The image, the outer flower is no more there, but it is reflected -
reflected in your mirror of consciousness. It will be there! THEN SLOWLY WITHDRAW YOUR
SIGHT FROM IT, THEN SLOWLY WITHDRAW YOUR THOUGHT FROM IT. So first, withdraw
from the outer object. Then only the inner image remains - the thought of the roseflower.
Now withdraw that thought also. This is very difficult, the second part, but if the first
part is done exactly as it is said, it will not be so difficult. First withdraw your mind
from the object, your sight. Then close your eyes, and just as you have removed your
eyesight from the object, remove yourself from the image. Withdraw yourself; become
indifferent. Do not look at it inside, just feel that you have gone away from it. Soon the
image will also disappear. First the object
disappears, then the image disappears. And when the image disappears, Shiva says, THEN.
Then you are left alone. In that aloneness one realizes oneself, one comes to the center,
one is thrown to the original source. This is a very good
meditation -- you can do it. Take any object, but let the object remain the same every day
so that the same image is created inside and you remove yourself from the same image.
Images in the temples were used for this technique.Now images are there, but the technique
is lost. You go to a temple -- this is the technique to do. Look at the statue of Mahavir
or Buddha or Ram or Krishna or any other. Look at the statue, concentrate on it; focus the
whole mind so that the statue becomes an image inside. Then close your eyes. Remove your
eyes from the statue, then close them. And then remove the image, wipe it out completely. Then you are there in your total aloneness, in your total purity, in your total innocence. Realizing that is freedom, realizing that is truth. |
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