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THE NINTH SAYING
JESUS SAID: THE MOTE THAT IS IN THY
BROTHER'S EYE THOU SEEST, BUT THE BEAM THAT IS IN THINE EYE THOU SEEST NOT.
WHEN THOU CASTEST
THE BEAM OUT OF THINE EYE, THEN THOU WILT SEE CLEARLY TO CAST THE MOTE OUT OF THY
BROTHER'S EYE.
Self-knowledge is
the most difficult thing -- not because it is difficult, but because you are scared to
know about yourself. A deep fear exists. Everybody is trying to escape, escape from
himself. This fear has to be understood. And if this fear exists, whatsoever you do will
not be of much help. You may think that you want to know yourself, but if this unconscious
fear is there you will continuously avoid, you will continuously try to hide, deceive. On
the one hand you will try to know yourself, and on the other hand you will create all
sorts of hindrances so that you cannot know.
Consciously you may
think, "I would like to know myself," but in the unconscious, which is bigger,
stronger, more powerful than the conscious, you will avoid self-knowledge. So the fear has
to be understood. Why are you afraid? One thing: if you really penetrate within yourself,
your image that you have created in the world will prove to be false. Your whole past will
come to mean nothing, because it has been like a dream. You have invested so much in it,
you have lived for it, and now to know that it has been a false phenomenon you feel hurt:
then your whole life has been wasted.
If whatsoever you
have been living has been a pseudo-life, not authentic, if you have never loved but just
pretended to love, how can you encounter yourself? ... Because then you will come to know
that the whole thing has been a pretence: not only have you pretended that you love, you
have also pretended that you are happy when you love. You have deceived nobody else but
yourself. And now to look back, to look within, fear grips you.
You have been
thinking that you are something unique; everybody does. That is the most ordinary thing in
the world, to think oneself extraordinary, something special, 'the chosen'. But if you
look at yourself you will come to know that there is nothing, there is nothing to be
egoistic about. Then where will the ego stand? It will tumble down, fall down to the dust.
Fear is there, so
you do not look at yourself. In not looking, you can go on creating dreams about yourself,
images about yourself. And it is very easy and cheap to create an image, but it is very
difficult and hard to really be something. One always chooses the cheapest -- and you have
chosen the cheapest. Now, to look at it is difficult.
In one house, the
phone rang in the middle of the night -- it was four a.m. The man got up, he was furious,
and he shouted into the instrument, "What do you want?"
The man at the other end said, "Nothing!"
Then the first man
was more furious. He said, "Then why have you phoned me in the middle of the
night?"
The other man said,
"Because the rate is cheaper!"
If the rate is
cheaper, you can even buy nothing. And that's what you have done. To create an image that
you are unique is cheap, but to be unique is arduous, very hard. Many, many lives of
struggle, striving, many lives of effort culminate into something when you become unique.
But to believe that you are unique is just cheap, you can do it right now, there is no
need to even move. And you have been believing in cheap things -- that's why fear exists.
You cannot look at
yourself. All that you have been thinking yourself to be you will not find there -- and
you know it well. Who else will know it as well as you know? If you think you are
beautiful, then you cannot look in the mirror if this beauty is just an idea. And you know
well! Rather than looking in the mirror, you will break all mirrors. Whenever an ugly man
or an ugly woman looks into the mirror, he or she thinks that something is wrong with the
mirror -- because it is so painful to realize that you are nobody.
You are somebody in
your eyes. Everybody else may know that you are nobody, but not you. Even a madman thinks
that the whole world is mad. The whole world says to him, "You are mad!" but he
will not listen because this is too painful. He will create all sorts of arguments,
rationalizations to say, "I am not mad."
It happened: Mulla Nasruddin came running
into a farm one evening and asked the farmer, "Have you seen a lunatic woman passing
through here?"
The farmer said,
"What did she look like?"
Nasruddin described
her. He said, "She is six feet four inches tall, very fat, and weighs forty-five
pounds."
The farmer looked a
little puzzled and said, "If she is six feet four inches tall and is very fat, how
can she weigh only forty-five pounds?"
Nasruddin laughed
and said, "Don't be silly -- didn't I tell you that she is a little crazy?"
It is always the
other who is wrong, who is crazy. That's how you protect your own so-called sanity -- this
is a protection. And a person who cannot look at himself, basically cannot look, because
he is not only afraid of looking at himself -- basically he is afraid of looking. ...
Because when you look at the other, the other can become the mirror; when you look into
the other, the other can indicate something about you. In the other's eyes you are
reflected, so you cannot look at the other. You create a fiction about yourself and then
you create a fiction about others; then you live in a dream world -- that is how everybody
is living.
And then you ask
how to be blissful. Your nightmare is natural: whatsoever you have done, only a nightmare
can come to flower from it. And you ask how to be at ease. No one can be at ease with
fiction, only with fact. Howsoever hard it may be to accept, only fact can make you
non-tense, only fact can lead you towards truth. If you deny the factuality then there is
no truth for you, and then you go on moving around and around and never hit the center.
I have heard, once it happened: A doctor
came to see a patient, a very ill woman. He entered the room and after five minutes he was
out. He asked the husband who was waiting there, "Give me a corkscrew!" The
husband was a little worried why a corkscrew should be needed. But then the doctor came
again after five minutes, perspiring, and he said, "Now give me a screwdriver!"
The husband got very excited, but still kept silent -- because the doctor knows what to
do. After five minutes the doctor was back again and he asked for a chisel and hammer.
Then it was too much, the distraught husband couldn't stand it any longer and he said,
"What is wrong with my wife?"
The doctor said,
"I don't know yet, because I have not been able to open my bag!"
And I tell you, you
are still struggling with the bag! And not only that -- that you are not able to open it
-- but you don't even want to open it. All these corkscrews and screwdrivers and chisels
and hammers that you carry with you are just phony. You don't even want to open the bag,
because once you open the bag then what are you going to do? Then the patient -- which is
you -- then the patient has to be diagnosed, then you have to look into yourself.
So everybody is
occupied with the bag -- that's what your business is, your profession, your occupation.
You may be a poet or a painter or a musician, but all your occupations are just ways to
remain engaged outside. That's why nobody is ready to be alone, even for a single moment.
It is so fearful, because when you are alone you may come across yourself. When you are
alone what will you do? When you are alone you are with you -- and the reality may erupt.
So everybody tries
for continuous occupation, to be occupied twenty-four hours a day. When you are occupied
you look a little happy, when you are not occupied you become unhappy. Psychologists say
that if a man is left unoccupied for a long period he will go insane. But why? Why, if you
are sane, should you go insane if you are left unoccupied for a long period? If you are
sane, then in a long fallow period, a long period where nothing is done, you will become
more sane, you will grow. But why should you become insane if you are left alone for a
long period? -- because you are insane! Your occupation simply hides the fact.
Look around --
because it is difficult to look at yourself -- but look around, look at people. A man is
constantly occupied with money. What is he really doing? Focusing his mind on money so he
can avoid himself. He goes on thinking about money, morning, evening and night. Even on
his bed he thinks about money and the bank balance. What is he doing with the money?
That's why when he gets the money he is at a loss -- what to do now? So the moment he gets
the money he was thinking about, he starts thinking about more money -- because money is
not the thing he was asking for. Otherwise, when he gets it he should feel fulfilled, but
not even a Rockefeller or a Ford is fulfilled.
When you get money
you immediately demand more, because the basic motivation is not the money, the basic
motivation is how to remain occupied. Whenever occupation is not there you are
uncomfortable, a deep unease arises in you. What to do? If there is nothing to do, you
will read the same newspaper again and again and again -- the same newspaper you have
already read completely. If there is no occupation, you may do anything which is not
needed at all, but you cannot remain at ease. Hence the insistence of all the masters,
that if you can sit for a few hours without doing anything, soon you will become
enlightened.
An unoccupied state
of mind is meditation. An occupied state of mind is the world, the sansar. It doesn't
matter what type of occupation -- whether you are interested in money or politics, or
social service or revolution, it makes no difference: your sanity is the same. Even if you
leave Lenin alone he will go mad: he needs the society and the revolution; if there is
nothing to do it will be impossible for him to exist, his sanity will be lost. He is sane
through you. Because of so much work, the energy is lost in the work, you are exhausted,
you can go to sleep.
Old men look almost
crazy and eccentric, and the reason is that they have nothing to do. Old age is not the
reason: they are now unoccupied, they are not needed, retired. Retired people always
become a little eccentric. Something has gone wrong with them. The man was okay -- he may
have been a president or a prime minister of a country, but retire him and see what
happens. Immediately he deteriorates. His body and mind both deteriorate and he starts
becoming a little eccentric, crazy, mad, because now there is no occupation, nobody looks
at him, nobody is interested in him. He has no work to do, nowhere to focus his mind. The
whole turmoil goes in and in -- he becomes a turmoil.
Psychologists say
that retired persons die ten years earlier than they would have died if they had still
been occupied. What happens? Why is it so difficult to be with yourself? And you always
think that others should feel happy with you -- your wife should feel happy with you, your
husband should feel happy with you. You yourself never feel happy with yourself, so how
can anybody else feel happy with you? If you are such a boring personality that you
yourself get bored with yourself, how is it possible that others can tolerate you? They
tolerate you for other reasons -- not because you are such a loving person, no! They
tolerate you because you give them an occupation. A husband is enough occupation for a
wife, a wife is enough occupation for her husband. This is a mutual deception: they have
agreed to deceive each other and help each other to remain occupied.
You cannot look at
yourself, you cannot come to self-realization, because that is a very faraway goal. You
cannot turn and see the 'facticity' about yourself, and the reason is: a false image, a
false identity, a false idea that you are somebody very important, significant -- the
whole world will stop if you die. What will happen to the world when you are not there?
When you were not there, what was happening? The world was a little more at peace, that's
all. When you are not there, there will be a little less trouble in the world, that's all
-- because one uneasy person will have disappeared, and he was creating uneasiness in
others. But to support the ego all these fictions are needed.
Napoleon became a
prisoner in his last days. He was kept prisoner on a small island, Saint Helena. He was
nothing anymore -- nobody ever is, but now even to continue in the fiction was very
difficult. He was an emperor, one of the greatest conquerors: "What to do now? How to
allow this fact that I am nothing anymore, just a prisoner, an ordinary prisoner?"
But he would not look at the fact, he continued in the old fiction. He didn't change his
clothes for six years, because the prison wouldn't give him clothes that suit an emperor.
His clothes were completely rotten, the color faded, they became dirty, but he would not
change them. The doctor of the prison asked him, "Why don't you change this coat? It
has become so dirty! We can give you better clothes, cleaner."
Napoleon looked at
him and said, "This is an emperor's coat -- it may be dirty but I cannot change it
for an ordinary coat!" He walked as if he were still the emperor, he talked as if he
were still the emperor, he ordered -- there was no one to listen to his orders, but he
continued ordering. He would write letters and orders, and he had brought his letter-pad
with him. In his mind he was still the emperor.
What was happening
to this poor man? And unoccupied, he began to be permanently ill. The doctor who was with
him kept a diary, and in the diary he writes, "I feel that he is not really ill, now
illness is just an occupation. Sometimes he says 'my stomach,' sometimes 'my head,'
sometimes 'my legs,'" and the doctor thought that nothing was wrong, the body was
absolutely okay. But now he had nothing to remain engaged with, now the only 'other' was
the body. The whole world of others had disappeared, he was alone. Now the body was the
other, so he remained occupied with the body.
Many people are ill
as an occupation: in the world, fifty percent of illness exists as an occupation. You
remain occupied, then you need not face yourself. Otherwise, what would have happened to
Napoleon? If he had faced himself, then he would have seen that he was a beggar -- and
that would have been too much. He died an emperor. Before his death he ordered how he
should be given the last send-off, every detail. Nobody was there to follow those details
because nobody was interested. But he gave the orders, and he must have died at ease
thinking that he was going to be given the last send-off like an emperor.
With Napoleon the
thing is so clear because he had been an emperor. That too was a fiction -- supported by
the society. But nothing had changed, Napoleon was the same, only the support had
disappeared. This is difficult to understand: there are fictions when the society supports
you, there are fictions when nobody supports you. That is the difference between a sane
and an insane person: a sane person is one whose fiction is supported by the society; he
has manipulated the society to support his fiction. An insane man is one whose fiction is
supported by nobody; he is alone so you have to put him in the madhouse.
But your support
doesn't make anything real -- if it is a fiction, it is a fiction. If you look at
yourself, immediately you will feel you are nobody, nothing important. But then the whole
earth, the base under your feet is withdrawn, you are in an abyss. Better not to look at
it -- just continue in your dreams. They may be dreams, but they help you to live in a
sane way.
Not only can't you
look at yourself, you cannot look at the other either, because the other is also
representative. So you also create fictions about the other: through hate you create a
fiction that the other is a devil; through love you create a fiction that the other is an
angel, or a god. You also create fictions about the other; you cannot look directly, you
cannot see through them, your perception is not immediate. You live in a maya, in an
illusion created by yourself. So whatsoever you see it is exaggerated: if you hate a
person, he immediately becomes the devil; if you love a person, he immediately becomes a
god. You exaggerate: if you see bad, then you exaggerate and transform it into the
ultimate badness; if you see good it becomes the ultimate good, a god.
But it is difficult
to maintain these fictions, so you have to change again and again. Why are you so
exaggerated in your perceptions? Why don't you see clearly what is there? -- because you
are afraid to see clearly. You want clouds around so everything remains in a mist; you
want not to know yourself. And all those who have known, they insist: "Know
thyself!" Buddha, Jesus, Socrates, they go on insisting, "Know thyself!"
The whole insistence of religion is to know thyself.
And you insist not
to know yourself. Sometimes you even play the game of knowing yourself. I come across many
people who are playing the game of knowing themselves, and they don't want to know. This
is a game: now they again want to create a new fiction, a religious fiction, and they come
to me so that I can support them. They say, "I have realized this, I have realized
that," and they look at me and their eyes are begging.
If I say,
"Yes, you have experienced this," they are supported, they go away happy. And if
I say, "No," they become unhappy, they never come back to me again. They simply
disappear because they have to find somebody else, some other authority. But why are you
in search of an authority? Why do you need a witness? If you have realized something, you
have realized it -- no need for any authority, because the experience in itself is
self-evident.
If you realize your
soul, you will not need anybody's recognition, a certificate. Even if the whole world says
you have not realized, it makes no difference; a vote is not needed, you know it has
happened. If a blind man has started seeing, he doesn't require anybody as a witness to
say that now he can see -- he can see, that's enough. But if the blind man is dreaming
that he can see, then he will need some authority to seal the fact that this is true, that
he can see.
People play games;
even spiritual games exist. And unless you stop playing and become sober about the fact
that fictions have to be dropped and the hard truth has to be faced as it is, nothing is
possible -- because this is the door. And if nobody supports you, then you yourself
support yourself. Then you stop talking with people, because they cannot understand you.
A man came to me a
few months ago and he said, "You can understand, nobody else can understand me,
because I have been receiving messages from God every night." And he had a big file
with him -- absolute nonsense! But he thinks he is receiving messages from God. And he
thinks that this is the latest Koran, that since Mohammed nobody has received such
messages -- now the Koran is out of date. If Mohammedans come to hear of it they will kill
him, because they believe in another fiction and he is trying to destroy their fiction.
And this man who receives messages from God, he was so nervous and trembling, looking at
me to see what I would say -- because whomsoever he meets, they laugh and think, "You
have gone crazy!" But he said, "I know that you are a realized man" -- now
he is bribing me! -- and continuously begging, "Just say, 'Yes, this is right.'"
But I said,
"If God is giving you messages you need not come to me, God is enough."
Then he became a
little doubtful, puzzled, and he said, "But who knows, it may be just my mind playing
tricks." That he knew well. Whenever you are playing tricks, deep down you know it,
and nobody is needed to show it to you -- but you want to hide the fact.
I told him,
"This is madness!" Then he never came back to me again -- now I am not a
realized man! He wanted a mutual thing: if I had said, "Yes, you are receiving
messages," he would have gone and said, "This man has become realized!"
If I accept your
fiction, then you can help my fiction; this is the mutual game that is going on. And this
game is so satisfying that you don't want to break it. But a deep discontent also follows
like a shadow. It is bound to be so because the whole thing is a fiction.
A beggar, thinking
that he is an emperor, knows that he is a beggar. This is the problem: he thinks he is an
emperor, pretends he is an emperor, and knows deep down that he is a beggar. He feels very
satisfied about the emperorhood, but a deep discontent follows like a shadow: "I am
just a beggar." This is your problem: you think something about yourself, and you
know it is not true.
You have never
loved, you have pretended; you have never been honest, you have pretended; you have never
been true, you have pretended -- your whole life is a long series of pretences. And now,
because you have wasted so much life in it, just to recognize that the whole thing has
been only a fiction is too much. Now you think, "Somehow I'll carry it to the very
end." But if you don't finish it, even if you carry it up to the very end it is not
going to give you anything. It is simply a wastage; it is a simple wastage, and in the end
the whole frustration will erupt.
That's why death is
so difficult. Death has nothing dangerous in it, it is one of the most beautiful phenomena
in the world -- you simply go to sleep! And everything goes to sleep: a seed sprouts and
then there is a tree; then again, seeds come and they fall down and go to sleep; then
again they will arise. After every activity a rest is needed. Life is an activity, death
is a rest. It has to be there so new life may arise out of it. Nothing is wrong in death,
nothing is dangerous in death.
But why is
everybody so afraid of dying? -- because at the moment of death all your fictions will
disappear; at the moment of death you will see that your whole life has been a wastage.
Why do people say that at the moment of death a person comes to see his whole life? It
happens, it is true: at the moment of death a person has to face his whole life, because
now there is no future and he cannot create any more fictions.
For fictions the
future is needed, because fictions exist in hope, fictions are for tomorrow. Death brings
home the fact that now there is no tomorrow; tomorrows are finished, now there is no
future. Where can you dream? Where can you project your fictions now? Nowhere to go!
Suddenly you are stuck. And your whole life you have been creating fictions in the future.
Now you are stuck, there is no future -- where will you look? You have to look at the
past, and at the moment of death the society is disappearing; you have to look at
yourself, there is nothing left. Then you come to realize the pain, the anguish of a whole
life wasted.
If it can happen to
you before death, you become a religious man. A religious man is one who has realized
before death that which everybody realizes in death. A religious man is one who has looked
while still alive -- looked into the past, seen through the whole game, realized the
fictitiousness of his life -- looked into himself.
If you look into
yourself the change is certain, absolutely certain, because once the fiction is realized
as a fiction it starts dropping. To be retained, a fiction has to be retained as a fact;
if it is to be carried, even an untruth has to be thought of as true. The moment you
realize that this is untrue and the thing penetrates, it starts dropping -- it is already
out of your hands, you cannot catch it. To continue the dream one has to believe that this
is not a dream, this is reality. The moment you become aware that this is a dream, the
dream is already disappearing.
But not to know is
your whole effort; you avoid it -- that's why you are never at ease when you are alone.
Even if you go to the Himalayas you take your radio with you, and the radio carries the
whole world; even if you go to the Himalayas, your wife, your friends, your children are
with you. You go for a holiday but you never go -- you carry the whole atmosphere there to
the beach, to the hills, and again you are surrounded by the whole nonsense.
It happened once, a shipwrecked sailor
reached a deserted island. For five years he had to live there because no ship passed. He
built a small hut, he lived there, but he continuously thought of the world. Everything
was so peaceful, as it had never been. He had never known, not even imagined that such
peace was possible. The island was completely deserted, there was nobody -- that was the
only problem, otherwise everything was perfect. The streams were beautiful, the trees were
filled with fruit; he could eat, he could rest; there was no worry, nobody to worry about,
nobody to create trouble. And he had always thought that someday he would like to go to a
peaceful place -- and suddenly he was there! But it was unbearable. Silence is unbearable,
one has to be capable of bearing it -- it can kill you.
It was so difficult
for this man, but he was an architect so he started building small things, just small
models, just to remain occupied. He made a small street and he named the street; he made
not only one church, he made two churches -- one near his house, another at the other end
of the town; he made small shops where one could go shopping. He created a whole town.
After five years,
when a ship came and anchored in the bay, he was very happy. A man came in a small boat to
the shore. He ran from his hut and reached the shore very excited that now he would be
going back into the world again. But he became very puzzled: the man came out of the boat
with a big bundle of newspapers. So he said, "What are these newspapers for, why have
you carried them here?"
And the captain of
the ship said, "First go through these, see what is happening in the world -- and
then tell us whether you still want to be rescued!"
The man threw those
newspapers in the sea and said, "What nonsense! But before I come into the boat I
would like to show you my town."
So he showed him
the town, but the captain was puzzled when he showed him the second church. He said,
"I can understand that you have made one church to pray in, but why this other
one?"
So he said,
"This is the church I go to, and that is the church I don't go to."
You need two
churches, at least two religions, because the mind is a duality: "This is the church
I say yes to, and that is the church I say no to. That is the wrong church; wrong people
go there, those who don't belong to me." He was alone, but he had created the whole
world. And he was eager to go back to the world, he was not ready to look at the
newspapers. And he did well, because once you look at the newspapers you would not like to
be rescued.
Look at your
newspapers! What is happening in the world? Is it worth living in it? But you read, you
don't look; your reading is not looking, you just read sleepily. You don't realize what is
happening in the world, what man has done to man, what man is continuously doing to man:
such violence, such foolishness, such a poisoning of every type of significance, of
everything that is beautiful and true and good -- everything poisoned. Would you like to
live in it? If you look, then it will be very difficult to decide to live in it. That's
why it's better not to look, just move as if you are in a hypnosis.
In order not to
look at oneself, another technique has been used that Jesus talks about in this sutra, and
that technique is: look in the other for all that is wrong so you can infer that you are
good.
There are two ways
to be good: being good -- that is difficult; then there is another way to be good and that
is relatively: prove that the other is wrong. You need not be good, just prove that the
other is wrong. That gives you a feeling that you are good.
Hence we all go on
proving that the other is the thief, the other is the murderer, the other is the evil one.
And then, when you have proved that everyone is wrong, suddenly you have a feeling that
you are good. This is a relative phenomenon: no need to change yourself, just prove that
the other is wrong. And this is very easy -- nothing is as easy as this. You can magnify
the badness in the other; you can magnify and nobody can prevent you from doing it. And
before that magnified, projected badness, evil, you look simply innocent. That's why if
somebody says about someone, "He is a bad man," you never argue against it,
never; you simply accept it. Rather, on the contrary, you say, "I always knew that
that was the case." But if somebody says something good about someone you argue, you
require proofs.
Have you observed
the fact that there have been millions of people who have said, "We will believe in
God but first give us proofs"? But nobody has yet written a book requiring proofs for
the devil -- nobody! Nobody requires any proof for the devil, nobody says, "I will
believe in the devil only when he is proved." No, you already know the devil is there
all around. Only God is missing, he is not there.
Why does good need
proof and bad need no proof? Observe the tendency and you will come upon a beautiful
phenomenon, one of the mysteries of the human mind. Deep down everybody seeks to be good.
But it is difficult, so what to do? Prove that the other is bad: "You are worse than
me -- so then I am at least a little good!"
JESUS SAID: THE MOTE THAT IS IN THY
BROTHER'S EYE THOU SEEST, BUT THE BEAM THAT IS IN THINE EYE THOU SEEST NOT.
WHEN THOU CASTEST
THE BEAM OUT OF THINE EYE, THEN THOU WILT SEE CLEARLY TO CAST THE MOTE OUT OF THY
BROTHER'S EYE.
You go on looking
on the other as darkness. This may give you an illusory feeling that you are light, but
this cannot give you light. And if you try to make the other enlightened because you think
he is in darkness, that is going to make things worse -- that is adding insult to injury.
In the first place darkness is projected by you, and in the second place you are not light
yourself so you cannot enlighten the other.
So people who try
to transform the society are the mischief-makers; people who try to change the other are
always dangerous. They are murderers in a very subtle way, but their murder is so subtle
that you cannot catch it. They don't kill you directly, but they cripple you, they cut you
-- and 'for your own good', so you cannot say anything against them. Your so-called saints
are just trying to destroy the darkness which is not in you or may not be in you, but
which they see to be there. They see a hell in you because that is the only way they can
see and feel themselves as heavenly.
Mulla Nasruddin died. He knocked at the
doors of heaven. Saint Peter opened the door, looked at Nasruddin and said, "But I am
not expecting anybody today, because in my reservation list there is no name; nobody is to
come today. So how...? You surprise me, how did you get here? Say your name loudly. Spell
it, so I can check."
So Nasruddin
spelled his name loudly: "M-U-L-L-A N-A-S-R-U-D-D-I-N."
Saint Peter went in
and looked at his list, but there was nobody to come on that day. He came back and he
said, "Say! You are not expected to come here today, you are not due for ten years
yet. So tell me, who is your doctor?"
Doctors can kill
you before your time; do-gooders can kill you before you are due, and do-gooders are
always dangerous. But you are all do-gooders in your own ways, small or big. Everybody
wants to change the other because everybody thinks the other is wrong; everybody wants to
change the world. And this is the difference between a political mind and religious mind.
A political mind
always wants to change the world because he cannot think that he is wrong -- the whole
world is wrong. If he is wrong, it is because the whole world is wrong and the whole
situation is so wrong. It has to be wrong, otherwise he would be a saint. A religious
person looks from precisely the other end. He thinks, "I am wrong, that is why the
world is wrong, because I contribute to the evil in it. Through me the world is wrong.
Unless I change myself, there can be no change."
The politician
starts from the world, but he never reaches any goal because the world is so big -- and
the world is not the problem. He creates more problems: through his medicine, many more
diseases arise which were not there; through his efforts he creates more misery. A
religious man changes himself. He only changes himself because that is the only thing that
is possible.
You can only change
yourself, and the moment you are changed the world starts changing, because you are a
vital part in it. And when you are enlightened -- changed, totally changed -- you become
more vital; you now have the supreme energy in you. A Buddha simply sits under his bodhi
tree and the world is transformed. And the world will never again be the same as it was
before Buddha.
A Jesus is
crucified, but that becomes a mark: history is divided from that day, history will never
again be the same as it was. So it is good that we acknowledge and divide the years in the
name of Jesus: we say 'before Christ', 'after Christ'. It is good, because before Christ a
totally different humanity existed; after Christ a different humanity came into being. The
phenomenon is so vital that whenever there is a Christ, whenever a consciousness rises as
high as the consciousness of Jesus, all other consciousnesses are simultaneously affected.
They also rise, they also have a glimpse -- and they cannot be the same again, the same
old level cannot be achieved.
A religious man
simply transforms himself, but the transformation is possible only if you look; the
transformation is possible only if you drop the fictions. If you come to realize your
'nobodiness', if you come to realize your nothingness, if you come to realize your
inauthentic life, immediately it starts dropping.
Knowledge is
revolution -- not knowledge that you gather through the mind, but knowledge that you come
to possess when you encounter yourself. Self-knowledge is a transforming force, nothing
else is to be done. This has to be understood: people think, "First we will know, and
then we will change." No! The moment you know, change occurs. Knowledge itself is
transforming; it is not that first you know and then you do something to change. Knowledge
is not a method, it is not a means; knowledge is the end in itself.
But when I use the
word knowledge I mean self-knowledge. All other knowledge is a means: first you have to
know the know-how and then you have to do something. But with self-knowledge the quality
is absolutely different: you know, and the very knowing changes you.
Drop the fictions.
Gather courage to know yourself. Drop the fear and don't try to escape from yourself!
And Jesus says:
WHEN THOU CASTEST THE BEAM OUT OF THINE EYE, THEN THOU WILT SEE CLEARLY... only when the
fictions are dropped. They are the beam in your eye, they have become a mist, a smoke, a
cloud in your eye. You cannot see clearly, you cannot see anything clearly, everything is
blurred. When the beam is cast out from thine eye, you will see clearly. Clarity must be
the goal -- just clarity of the eyes so that you can look directly and penetrate to the
fact without creating any projection around it. But this is very difficult because you
have become so automatic in it, so mechanized.
You look at a
flower and immediately your mind starts talking: "A beautiful flower, never seen
before." Some poetry, borrowed of course, arises. The flower is missed, the clarity
is not there. Words blur -- can't you see a flower without naming it? Is naming a must? Is
your naming the flower going to help in any way? Will the flower be more beautiful if you
have the botanical knowledge about it? That is the difference between a botanist and a
poet: a botanist knows about the flower, the poet knows the flower. The botanist is simply
ignorant -- he knows much but it is about and about -- the poet sees.
In Sanskrit there
is only one word for rishi and kavi, for the seer and the poet. There are not two words,
because they say whenever there is a real poet he is a seer; whenever there is a seer he
is a poet. Clarity -- then life becomes poetry. But then you have to look at the flower
without naming it -- is it a rose or something else?
Why are words
needed? Why do you say, "It is beautiful"? Can't you see the beauty without
speaking? Is it necessary to repeat that it is beautiful? What do you mean by repeating
it? It means the flower is not enough; you need a suggestion that it is beautiful, then
you can create beauty around it. You don't see the flower, the flower is just a screen,
you have to project beauty on it.
Look at the flower
and don't say anything. It will be difficult, the mind will feel uneasy because it has
become habitual. It constantly goes on chattering. Look at the flower and make it a
meditation. Look at the tree and don't name it, don't say anything. There is no need; the
tree is there -- why say anything?
I have heard it happened: Lao Tzu, one of
the greatest Chinese mystics, used to go for a walk in the morning every day. A neighbor
used to follow him, but the neighbor knew that Lao Tzu was a man of silence, so for years
he followed him on the morning walk but he never said anything. One day there was a
visitor at the neighbor's house, a guest, and he also wanted to come. The neighbor said,
"Don't say anything, because Lao Tzu wants to live directly. Don't say
anything!"
They went out, and
the morning was so beautiful, so silent, the birds were singing, and just out of habit the
guest said, "How beautiful!" Just this much, nothing much; for a one hour walk,
this is not very much: "How beautiful!" But Lao Tzu looked at him as if he had
committed a sin.
Back home, going in
his door, Lao Tzu said to the neighbor, "Never come again! And never bring anybody
else -- this man seems to be so talkative." And he had only said, "How
beautiful!" -- too talkative. And Lao Tzu said, "The morning was beautiful, it
was so silent. This man disturbed the whole thing."
"How
beautiful!" It fell like a stone in a silent pool. "How beautiful!" fell
like a stone in a silent pool and the whole thing became rippled.
Meditate near a
tree, meditate with the stars, with the river, with the ocean, meditate in the market with
people passing. Don't say anything, don't judge, don't use words -- just look. If you can
clear your perception, if you can attain a clarity of looking, everything is achieved. And
once this clarity is achieved you will be able to see yourself.
Self-knowledge
happens to a clear mind, not to a mind filled with knowledge, not to a mind filled with
judgments of good and bad; not to a mind filled with beauty, ugliness, but to a mind that
is without words. Self-knowledge happens to a wordless mind. It is always there, you only
need a clarity of mind to perceive it so that it can be reflected; you need a mirrorlike
mind so that the reflection becomes possible. Once this happens, then you can help your
neighbor, never before.
So don't advise
anybody! All your advice is dangerous because you don't know what you are doing. Don't try
to change anybody, not even your son, not even your brother. Nobody is in need of your
change because you are dangerous. You can cripple, you can kill, you can maim, but you
cannot help transformation. Unless you are transformed don't move into another's life.
When you are filled with light you can help. Really, then there is no need to make any
effort to help. Help flows from you just as light flows from a lamp, or fragrance comes
out of a flower, or the moon shines in the night -- no effort on the part of the moon, it
just flows naturally.
Somebody asked
Basho, a Zen master, "Say something about your lectures. You go on talking and still
you talk against words. You go on talking, and in those talks you go on talking against
words and against talking. So say something about it!"
What did Basho say?
Basho said, "Others talk -- I bloom!"
When there is no
effort, then it is a blooming. Then it is just like a flower blooming, there is no effort
to bloom. A Basho speaks, a Buddha speaks -- no effort, it just happens! It is a natural
phenomenon when Buddha is speaking. When you are speaking it is not a natural phenomenon,
other things are involved: you want to impress the other, you want to change the other;
you want to control, manipulate the other, you want to dominate the other; you want to
give the impression that you are a man of knowledge -- you want to feed your ego. Many
other things are involved. You are not blooming. It is a great political game when you
talk, there is a strategy in it, tactics.
But when a Basho
talks, he blooms. If somebody is there, then he will be benefited -- but to benefit the
other is not the goal, the benefit can happen effortlessly. The flower does not bloom for
you. If you pass by the path the fragrance will reach you; you can enjoy it, you can feel
ecstatic, you can be grateful -- but the flower never flowered for you, the flower simply
flowered.
A Buddha blooms, a
Jesus blooms, and the whole world is benefited. But you go on trying to benefit others and
nobody is benefited, rather you do harm. The world would be better if there were less
mischievous people around changing and transforming it. All the revolutions have simply
done harm, and every reform has led into a deeper mess.
D.H.Lawrence once
suggested that for a hundred years we should stop all revolutions, we should stop all
universities, we should stop all reforms and all talk about them, and for a hundred years
we should live like primitives. The suggestion is beautiful. Then humanity could come to
be alive again, the energy could arise and people could attain to clarity.
Words have dimmed,
they have become too burdensome, and you carry so much knowledge that you cannot fly in
the sky. You are burdened so much that you are not weightless, your wings are not free.
And you cling to the things that have become your prisons and bondages because you think
they are very valuable. They are valueless things, and not only valueless but also
dangerous to you: words, scriptures, knowledge, theories, 'isms' -- they all cripple you.
Clarity cannot be attained through them. Put aside all scriptures, put aside all judgment.
Look at life like a
child not knowing what he is looking at, just looking -- and that looking will give you a
new perception. That new perception is what Jesus is talking about. I will repeat the
words:
THE MOTE THAT IS
IN THY BROTHER'S EYE THOU SEEST, BUT THE BEAM THAT IS IN THINE EYE THOU SEEST NOT.
WHEN THOU CASTEST
THE BEAM OUT OF THINE EYE, THEN THOU WILT SEE CLEARLY TO CAST THE MOTE OUT OF THY
BROTHER'S EYE.
Only that can be
helpful. If you become a light unto yourself you become a light unto others. But that is a
blooming, and everybody is benefited -- knowingly, unknowingly, everybody is benefited.
You become a blessing.
Enough for today. |
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