Prem Nadi Ke Teera #15
Chapter Summary
Osho insists that the goal is not to 'become one' with the present—a swoon that annihilates awareness—but to live fully awake in the moment, aware rather than absorbed. He distinguishes existence from the time-process: past and future belong to time, the present belongs to being, and standing at the door of the moment lets life be lived without slip. Through simple experiments—buying today’s ticket for tomorrow’s train, watching the pendulum, or meditating on the breath—one trains the mind to stop swinging into past and future until it pauses where the moment is. When the center is found life becomes lila, a play in which one can act responsibly without being spellbound, and meditation is the means to returning attention again and again to what is. On the future and worry: act from presence—arrange what must be arranged today (for example mail the money or buy the ticket) but do not be rapt in imagined tomorrows; responsible planning is not absorption. On meditation and concentration: awareness differs from concentration—openness to all impressions rather than a hypnotic fixation—and the breath is the nearest, simplest anchor to bring the mind back without force. On memory and intelligence: memory is a recording trick while intelligence distills essence and forgets the nonessential, so university tests often reward recall not understanding. On death and unconsciousness: with steady practice awareness remains even through fainting, sleep, and the dying moment, so death need not be missed as long as consciousness learns to witness.
Questions in this Discourse
And the present does not stop for you even for a moment. Whether you are present or not, it keeps rushing on. You are there or you are not—still the present does not wait. It does not stop for you; it goes on. Time keeps flowing. So any moment in which we are not present passes by empty.
If a person’s mind gets into the habit of always living in the future, understand that he will miss his whole life. He won’t even know when life came and when it went. Because the law is this: right now, in my hand there is only one moment; never are two moments in my hand at once. Whenever it is, it is a single moment.
Keep in mind what Mahavira means by “time”: that portion of duration which is actually in our hands. That last slice of the temporal that is in our grasp—that is called time. And therefore samayik means: to be in the moment that is in our hands. Time means the ultimate unit of the moment—the final atomic particle of the instant that we actually hold. If we break objects, we arrive at the atom; and if we break duration—break time—we arrive at samaya, the moment.
There is only one difficulty: he cannot come into harmony with Existence. Whatever Existence is, in one way or another he keeps missing it. And the formula of this missing is to be in the past or in the future.
I am not saying: think; nor am I saying: don’t think. I am saying: if you are ever to enter the realization of Existence; if you are ever to know Truth; if you are ever to experience Bliss—then there is only one way. And that way is to somehow stop the mind’s pendulum from swinging to the extremes of past and future, and to make it still where the moment is—now.
Now, this is a very amusing point: the ordinary mind sways in time. Consciousness goes from the past toward the future; from the future it goes back toward the past. And there is a law to it. Just as a clock’s pendulum goes from left to right, then from right to left—when the pendulum is going left, you cannot even imagine that in going left it is gathering the energy to go right. Having gone here, in that very going it has collected just so much strength that it will reverse. Going right, it is again gathering power to go left. This has a very interesting meaning. It means that when we are going in one direction—into one extreme—we are inevitably accumulating the energy to move into its opposite.
In the village, if a child is laughing, his mother says, “Don’t make him laugh too much, or he will start crying.” There is a very deep principle behind it. If someone laughs too much, what will he do in the end? When the pendulum reaches the limit of laughter it will turn back—then crying will begin. Understand me quickly, otherwise you will wander elsewhere.
Our consciousness swings to extremes. And as long as we swing between the extremes of time—between past and future—the present is continually missed. For a second the pendulum pauses after going left, then the return journey begins. After going right it pauses for a second, then the return journey begins. But it never pauses in the middle. It is always in transit. Either the pendulum is going here or it is going there; it is never in the middle. It only appears to be in the middle, but it never is. It is either moving left or moving right. The middle occurs in its journey, but it is missed.
What I am saying is this: for an ordinary person, the movement of the mind goes on within time—past and future… The extraordinary person stands in the middle. And then a completely new experience begins. Then no part of time can slip by without being lived by him, because he is always present right where time emerges. He stands at the very door. As if there were a doorway from which the wind comes and goes. I am sometimes in this corner, sometimes in that corner. I am never at the door. At most, the slight touch of the wind as it moves from one corner to another—that is my experience.
So the present, in my vision, is not a part of time. It is not a segment of the time-process. In my understanding, past and future are the only parts of time. The present belongs to existence, not to time. And the person who stands in the present enters existence. Call it Brahman, call it the Self, call it Truth—whatever name you wish. Call it liberation—any name will do.
Therefore, in the light of this emphasis, what you are asking is irrelevant. I am not telling you to think, or not to think—that is not what I am saying. I am telling you that if you want to know this depth of life, this is what you will have to do. And once one has known it, neither the past nor the future has any meaning for him—none at all. Such immense significance dawns in his life, life comes to him with such completeness, that he no longer thinks in fragments like, “I will live tomorrow.” This too should be understood a little. What kind of people are we?
If I have a beloved and I am to meet her, then until I meet her I keep thinking about her—she has not yet come. When I do meet her, I start thinking of something else, because that is the habit of my mind—that is how my mind is made. When she has met me, I am thinking of other things; when she has gone, then again I think of her—of her… But that moment when she actually met me…
Likewise, when a man has not eaten, he thinks of eating. When he is eating, he thinks of other things. When he gets up after eating, he again starts thinking about food. The wonder is that if, while he was eating, he had lived the eating totally, there would be no need to think either ahead or behind. The need to think arises because the juice, the savor of eating, was not tasted. Had that savor been tasted, the matter would be finished.
So we miss the juice of life, and therefore we go on thinking about the future and the past. And what you are referring to is not really about the past and future. It pertains to the practical world where our everyday life is organized, where everything runs by the hands of the clock—trains are racing, airplanes are flying, cars are speeding, shifts are changing, there are offices and shops. That world is the world made by man—and it has been made by the man who lives in the past and the future. Remember, it was created by the one who lives in past and future; it was not created by the one who lives in the present.
...We think only in the past and the future. The whole arrangement is like that. You have to live in it; you will have to live in it. So for such a person, living in it has only one meaning. I am not saying, “Don’t live in it”—where will you go? You will have to live in it. And living in it means only this much: as if there are four children, marrying off their dolls. You too are sitting in that room and you join in. The children are very serious. All the wedding preparations are going on—just as serious as the elders at real weddings. But you have joined in. Playing there with those children, you too are busy adorning the bride and the groom. Yet the way you take part there is such that, all the while, you know it is a game—nothing more than that.
That is why a very precious notion evolved in this land: lila. And lila means play. That is why we do not call Krishna’s life “Krishna-charitra”; we say Krishna-lila, Ram-lila. And this is very interesting. One might think we should say “Ram-charitra”—but we do not; to say that is wrong. Even the title of Tulsidas’s book is a bit wrong—Ramcharitmanas is not quite right. Tulsidas did not understand the meaning of lila. Between lila and charitra there is a world of difference.
Charitra means the person takes what is happening to be absolutely real. Lila means the person is only a participant in a play. That is to say: understand deeply—suppose a Ram-lila is going on in Delhi right now. The one playing the role of Ram there—the real Ram did not do anything more than that; that is what lila means. It means that now, now, this Ram’s Sita will be lost—the Ram who acts today in the drama will lose his Sita; he will cry, he will shout, beat his chest, cry “Alas, Sita!”—and then at night he will sleep peacefully. If Ram’s life also appeared to them as lila, it could not be different from this. What does it mean, after all? It makes no difference. Only the canvas was larger—on a bigger platform the play of life went on: the characters were grander, the plot more extended—ten, twenty, even fifty years long. Still, it was a story. It was lila.
One who lives in the present will live among all these people who do not live in the present, and for him it becomes a lila. Then, if he has to think about the future, the very meaning of “having to think” is that he will never be spellbound by it. His thinking will be of this kind: if I have to give you money tomorrow, I will mail it today. You will receive it only tomorrow; even today I am not actually giving you the money—I am only sending it by post. And the post will take twenty-four hours to reach, won’t it? So today I am putting it in the mail. But I have no taste, no enchantment in the future; I am not rapt there. My rapture is in the present. And that means that when I am sending you the money by post, I will live the act of sending it totally.
The person who is entangled in worry about tomorrow may even put one letter into the wrong envelope. That will not happen with me. Because when I am putting the money into the envelope, I am wholly present there. Granted, you will get the money tomorrow and the arrangement has to be made today; but whatever I am doing now—that is where I am, totally. Do you understand what I mean?
So you will have to keep thinking about tomorrow in this sense. But it is not an infatuated kind of thinking in which you become absorbed, in which you drown. And your world of play can also go on; there is no harm in it. But it will be a world of play only when you have become centered. Otherwise it will not appear as play at all; it will seem real—very real.
The truth is that the present never seems as real to us as the future and the past seem. You hardly notice the present—because it is real, how will you “notice” it? The past seems very real because it has happened—solid—everything is laid down there; what was to happen has happened. And the future seems very real because our desires tell us, “Let this happen, let that happen.” These feel solid. Yet both are utterly false—because the past is nowhere now, and the future is nowhere either. What is, is the thin line of the present—and it is being missed; that is the real. By understanding this, by looking with awareness, by experimenting in life, slowly, slowly the pendulum’s swing will lessen; then little by little it will begin to come to a standstill. And any device can be used by which you begin to live in the present even for a little while.
This is the whole point of meditation and the like: for half an hour or an hour, close the door and, at least for that half hour, remain only in the present—that is the experiment. For the remaining twenty-three and a half hours, do as you do. For half an hour, shut the door and be only in the present. Do not let the past enter, nor the future—let only what is, be. A car will pass on the street, a sound will come—listen, because it is. The fan will... run; its sound will come—listen to it; it is. A child will cry—listen; it is. Thoughts will move in your mind—know them; they are. The breath will move...
In between it will slip; let it slip. Then return—come back again. It will slip, and it will slip a lot. It will stay for a second or two, and then slip.
Because that is its habit of lifetimes. Its habit is doing; it has never been in the present. And now you are putting it into a hassle—something it has no experience of. You have somehow dragged it there; it doesn’t pause even for a second before—gone. It goes; by force of habit it goes back again. It is an absolutely mechanical routine. That will break gradually.
Even when he sleeps at night, he knows, “I am asleep.” It is known the whole time. This event too is part of his consciousness: “I am asleep.” That is why, even at the time of death, he will be able to remain aware: “I am dying. I am dying; this death is happening.”
And if the practice of meditation continues, then even in sleep it becomes known: this is sleep. In fainting it is known: this is fainting. In death it is known: this is death. And when it is known, it means I have never really slept—because if I had slept, who would know it? Nor have I ever been unconscious—because if I had fainted, who would be there to know? Nor have I ever died—because if I had died, then who would be left to know?
That very awareness of knowing becomes the experience of immortality: then I do not die. But such a state can arise at the moment of death only if we go on practicing continually; otherwise it will not arise. The very thought of death will render us unconscious—and... because death happens neither in the future nor in the past. The event of death occurs in the present; whenever it happens, it is in the present. But the habit of your mind is to move back and forth, hence all the confusion. You should understand that habit a little and work with it; it will break. Surely it will break.
A goal has come into your mind—then it has already sunk in. Why keep bringing it up again and again? You are engaged in some work, you are doing a research. The search has already become part of your consciousness. Why keep remembering it? Now plunge wholly into the work. And in fact we don’t notice that the very idea of the search also arose in some present moment. I do not call that the future.
Imagine a man who sees a case of cancer, and the thought arises in him: What can be done to remove cancer? He sets out on a search. Seeing the cancer, the thought “How can it be removed?” and the resolve to inquire—all of it occurred in the present moment. Now he is engaged in the research. Whatever happens will happen only in the present. The day the result comes, that too will come only in the present. Nothing can ever come in the future; everything arrives as today.
But suppose a man sees cancer and says, “How can I remove it?” and instead of moving into any present action, he sits with eyes closed and starts imagining: “I will cure the cancer of the whole world. No illness will remain anywhere. I will do this; it has happened…”—and in his mind now the whole world is healed. Eyes closed, he is very pleased: “Now there are no cancer patients.” This man has gone into the future and has missed the present. Understand this well: action can never happen in the future. That is an impossibility. Action must be done only in the present. Only imagination can be about the future.
Therefore, in meditation, action is not as much of an obstacle as imagination is. People have understood it the other way around. Action is not an obstacle to meditation at all. But people think, “Leave all work—only then meditation will be possible.” And the amusing thing is: the man who leaves all work—he will imagine. What else will he do? Sitting, sitting—what will he do? Sitting, sitting—what will he do? Whereas action itself is not an obstacle.
There was a Zen master. He was digging soil in his garden. A man came to him and asked, “I have come to meet such-and-such master. Where can I find him?” He didn’t know he was speaking to the very man; he thought he was some gardener working in the garden. “Would such a great master be digging holes in a garden?” The master said, “That master is present. But are you present? Meeting him can happen right now.” The man insisted, “Where is he? I have come to meet him.” The master said, “Then go search right now. If you find him, tell me too.” He said, “Search the whole garden, and if you find him, let me know.”
The man searched the entire garden and came back. The master was still digging. Someone else—a second gardener—told him, “He is the one.” He returned and said, “What kind of man are you! Why didn’t you just say, ‘I am he’?” The master said, “Since the knowing of ‘am’ happened, the ‘I’ has not remained. Since it became clear that ‘am,’ the ‘I’ was lost. And as long as there was a sense of ‘I,’ we only used ‘am’ in a sentence—there was no knowing of what being is.” Then he added, “You have come back very quickly. Those who go searching usually return very late. Still, you came back fast—you didn’t wander too much.”
The man asked, “I’ve landed in great difficulty. I myself came to inquire about meditation, and you are digging a pit. And I’ve heard that all activity has to be dropped; only then is meditation available.” The fakir said, “Then sit down quietly and watch how I dig a pit.” He sat for a while. He said, “I didn’t understand anything. You are just digging a pit—what else are you doing?” The fakir said, “Exactly—I am only digging a pit; that much you understood, didn’t you? I am not doing anything else. Then meditation happened. If I am simply digging a pit and doing nothing else—then I have become present in the present.”
But awareness means that all that is happening right now all around is happening, and you are open to it. A horn sounds—you hear that too. I am speaking—you hear that too. An ant bites your foot—you notice that too. There is a pain in your head—you are aware of that too. You are simply awake. Whatever is happening around, you are aware of it all. You are not unconscious. That is awareness.
And then, I would say, you will understand more rightly. When I say “only listening,” I do not object to the other things that are also being heard. By “only listening” I mean you are not doing something else. The distinction I am making is this: you may appear to be sitting here, but you are not listening to me—you have gone somewhere else. You are shopping in some store. No one here will know that except you. You are quarreling with someone; you have gone elsewhere—then you are not even aware. Then you are lost in a dream.
So there are three states. One is the usual state of our mind, always doing something or other—that is a kind of dream-state. One state is being concentrated—that is a kind of stupor, a trance. There is no dream in it; there is trance. And one state is being fully awake. You have neither gone anywhere nor are you bound to anything; you are simply present. If this building catches fire, you will know. If someone passes by shouting, you will know. It is not necessary that if someone passes by shouting you must think about it—if you start thinking, then you are gone again. I am not speaking about thinking. You are simply open to all the impressions falling from all around. Among them, one impression is also mine—you are open to that too, not closed. I do not advocate concentration; I advocate awareness. Openness. Let the mind be open.
Forgetting is a larger portion of intelligence than remembering. Remembering is one part, but forgetting is an even bigger part. The more intelligent a person is, the faster things drop from his mind, and the mind becomes clear again. Then it becomes capable of grasping things. Whereas with an unintelligent person, whatever he grabs onto gets stuck. It doesn’t move; it remains there, fixed like a root. So there are techniques for making that mind dull and rigid.
You will be surprised: if you trace the gold medalists of the world, where do they vanish, where do they go? Where do those people end up? Do they ever seem to have done anything great in life? It is never seen. The reason is that what was tested was their memory; there was no examination of intelligence at all. And as yet, no methods have been found to examine intelligence.
If someone reads the entire Ramayana, he doesn’t sit down to memorize all the couplets like junk. Whoever does that is utterly unintelligent. The essence of the Ramayana is like this: from millions of flowers we extract a little perfume, and then one can put a drop behind the ear. One doesn’t carry a thousand-kilo bundle on the head. The intelligent person keeps the fragrance—the distillate of what he has known. Whatever is essential is what emerges.
The unintelligent person has piles of rubbish; he collects everything. He finds it difficult to let go; he is afraid. The intelligent person is not afraid of forgetting anything, because intelligence is with him. Even if he forgets everything he has read, written, or heard, his intelligence will remain. Then, if a problem stands before him, he can still encounter it.
But the unintelligent is afraid: “I have no intelligence of my own, so I must not forget the answers I have prepared. Tomorrow if someone asks a question, where will I find the answer?” So the unintelligent tries to compensate for the lack of intelligence with memory. He keeps saying, “Let me memorize this too, and that too—you never know when it might be needed.” And if it is needed, he has no intelligence of his own to draw from; then he will have to search and retrieve whatever he has stored.
It is simply a mechanism of recording. Just as it records on tape, so impressions are recorded on brain cells. The mechanism of recording is the same; there is no real difference. Our brain cells carry the same chemicals that coat this tape, and those chemicals do the recording. The more wooden, dull a person is, the more, if you teach him a few tricks, he will record. He will record that much. And you will be surprised to know: the truly intelligent in the world are, in one sense, forgetful. Very intelligent people are, in one sense, great forgetters—in the sense that whatever is nonessential they simply cannot retain.
As for Edison—the case went so far that that single man made a thousand inventions. Such a mind is rare. Yet in matters of memory he was so weak that, say he had just scribbled something on a slip of paper: his whole room would be covered with such slips, because he had no memory for where anything was. Whatever came to his mind, he would jot down. Then a thousand slips would be lying around the room. Now the question arose: where has that particular slip gone? He could not remember that either. So his wife made a diary for him: keep a diary. But where had he put the diary? Was it left in the bathroom, in his coat, pressed inside some book—where is it?
One morning he was seated for breakfast. His wife placed the food and he was absorbed in his work. Just then a friend came to see him. Seeing Edison immersed, the friend ate the breakfast himself, cleaned the plate, and set it aside. A little later Edison looked there, picked up the plate, and said to his friend, “Forgive me, you came a little late—I have already had my breakfast.” The whole memory of it was gone. “Forgive me, you came a little late; I have eaten.” His friend said, “This is the limit!”
This man had an extraordinary intellect—so sharp, so alert, working on so many planes—that whether he had eaten breakfast or not, whether this happened or that, all that can slip away. It need not remain in focus. Do you understand? It can all slip out—this rubbish can fall outside the focus. The focus has its limits; it falls outside.
Consider a photographic plate. You click the camera and the plate is exposed—but it is spoiled in a single shot. Because the plate’s memory is too strong: what it grabs, it grabs. The plate has seized your face—now it is used up. But a mirror has absolutely no memory. You come before it: perfectly reflected. You go away: perfectly gone. The mirror is empty again. Hence another person may come, a third, a thousand; the mirror will reflect and be empty again. So the mirror is more intelligent than the photographic plate. Do you see what I mean? Because the mirror is more alive. The photographic plate does the mirror’s work only once, and then it is finished—because whatever it has caught, it has caught.
The intelligent person learns so much every day that he must discard a great deal every day. For him, forgetting is a great capacity. The more he can forget, the more he can move in new directions. If he cannot forget, those directions get blocked. Yet such a person still has a certain essential memory.
Essential memory is something altogether different. The nonessential drops away from it; whatever is essential for consciousness is preserved. And another delightful thing: he never has to recollect it. The difference in memory between the unintelligent and the intelligent is this—when the unintelligent remembers, it is memory by effort, by strain. The intelligent one understands, and the matter is finished. Whatever is truly understood inevitably becomes part of his very intelligence—it has become his.
At Gandhi-ji’s side there was a secretary, Mahadev Desai. Gandhi received so many letters that he could not answer them all; he would have Mahadev draft the replies. Mahadev would write them, read them aloud, Gandhi would say, “Fine,” and sign. One day Vallabhbhai said to him, “This is not right: you should not leave the replying to Mahadev.”
A letter had come from the Viceroy, and Vallabhbhai said, “I do not like it that he writes the answer. Often it can happen that he writes something you yourself would never have written. Hearing it read out, it may sound all right and be sent off. But you might have written something else. It may not sound wrong, you may say ‘All right,’ but it might still not be the same.”
So Gandhi-ji said, “This letter has not been opened yet.” He opened it, gave one copy to Mahadev and kept one himself. He told Mahadev, “Go into the other room and write the reply,” and Gandhi wrote a reply of his own. Vallabhbhai sat there. Mahadev returned with his reply. Mahadev’s reply was read; Gandhi-ji’s reply was read. Gandhi asked Vallabhbhai, “Which one shall we send?” He said, “Mahadev’s is more like yours—yours is not.” Gandhi-ji said, “By living so close, Mahadev has understood me so deeply that many times I may make a mistake, but he will not. I myself may slip, but he does not. He has grasped the whole thing—what this man would say. He has lived it from within, so there is no worry. If I make a mistake, I have Mahadev correct my mistake—this is…”
This is perfectly possible. It is possible because Gandhi-ji had a thousand other tasks. So many—thousands—of tasks crowded him. Mahadev had no other job. His one task was to understand Gandhi-ji. Living close, he imbibed the whole script. And it can happen that Gandhi himself may not give the reply that Gandhi should give. Do you see my point? It sounds absurd—because whatever Gandhi writes should be the right thing for him. But it can happen. And then there is my own strange experience: I have never memorized anything. I am positively hostile to memorizing—because I say we have to memorize only what we have not understood.
I taught at the university for so many years, and my students had a constant complaint: I would not allow note-taking. I told them, “To take notes means you are not understanding. You are committing an injustice against me. I will explain, and explain again—I am willing to explain ten times. Keep telling me you have not understood, I will go on explaining. The moment you say, ‘Now I have understood,’ I will end it—but I will not let you write. Because writing means you want writing to do the work of understanding. Why are you writing?”
Writing means: right now we are not understanding, but let us write it down; later we will memorize it and manage. If understanding grows, an essential memory comes with it—but that is purely a by-product. And all these exercises of avadhan and so on are just devices, tricks. They do not increase a person’s intelligence, nor do they develop his consciousness.
Consider how our mind works. A small child reads: “ga, for Ganesh.” Then he drops “Ganesh”; only “ga” remains. If he kept saying “ga, for Ganesh” for everything, he would never learn to read; it would be chaos. So “Ganesh” drops away; “ga” remains. Then the child reads: “a, small a; ba, small ba—ab.” Later he doesn’t read a and ba separately; he reads “ab.” You may not have noticed, but when you read a whole line you don’t actually read every word fully. You read only the beginning of the word; the latter parts just pass by.
That’s why even in proofreading mistakes slip through—ones the proofreader never notices—because there too he does the same thing. He sees it says “luxury,” reads “lux,” and the rest… the rest is simply what he assumes will be there. He doesn’t read it; he just moves on. Then you read entire sentences at once—just as you stopped reading a and ba separately and began to read “ab,” so later you take in the whole sentence together.
And if this is systematized a bit, you can read even faster. Similarly, there are people who can do mathematical problems—ones that would take an hour, half an hour, two or three hours on the blackboard—straightaway, without moving a finger. Their consciousness, their mind, is working with great intensity, and there is a method to that functioning. In some it may be inborn; in others it can be brought by training—because there is so much clutter. The amusing thing is: none of this has even a farthing’s worth of connection with spirituality.
And if you are aware in the present, you need not worry. Now no moment of time can pass you by without asking. Yes, the reverse can happen: if you are anxious about the future, the present moment can pass by. You won’t even notice. It will have to come into your hands—and you be aware. Hence someone once asked...
There was a Sufi fakir, Bayazid. Someone asked him, “How long should I meditate?” Bayazid said, “How long, you fool—how much time do you have? Tell me that, then I’ll tell you.” He said, “I don’t understand.” Bayazid said, “Where do you have more than a single moment? Just meditate for one moment; drop worrying about the rest. If you learn to meditate for one moment, the matter is finished. You never have two moments together that you would need to meditate for two. If you are meditative for one moment, then whatever moment comes—you are meditative. So it is only a question of one moment.”
This is true. If someone learns to awaken even for a single moment, he is awake for eternity—because even eternity cannot pass without moments. And all this we say—“the coming moment, the going moment”—we talk like this only until we have not awakened. The day we awaken, time evaporates. There is no coming moment, no going moment. What is, is the present. It’s just that our whole way of thinking right now—you have no idea.
A little caterpillar moves on a leaf. You may not know that it feels as if the leaf is sliding backward on both sides—just as it seems to you in a train. You sit in a train that is standing still, and the train beside you begins to move. For a moment you are startled: “Has my train started moving?” Suppose there is no platform visible on your side, or the doors are closed. It’s by seeing the platform on this side that you confirm your own train hasn’t moved—the platform is standing still. But imagine that in that moving train...
Einstein used to say: suppose in space there are two spacecraft. On both sides there is emptiness, emptiness on both sides. If one craft starts moving, the people in the other will feel, “I too have started moving.” But how can they verify that they are not the ones moving? What means do they have to test it? There is no tree standing, no platform—nothing at all; emptiness on both sides. How will they know, “I didn’t move; the one beside me moved”? Do you see what I mean?
A caterpillar moves on a leaf and it feels that on both sides the leaf is sliding backward. How is the caterpillar to know it isn’t so? What means does it have? Even if it looks back, the leaf will still seem to be sliding away. Whenever the caterpillar moves, how can it be certain whether it is moving, or the leaf is going back on both sides? Those who have researched caterpillars say the caterpillar never knows. A great deal of investigation has been done—those small, long, straight-moving caterpillars that crawl on leafy greens. It doesn’t know; it is one-dimensional. It just goes straight ahead, and the leaf goes back on both sides. How can the caterpillar know, “I moved, or the leaf slid back?” So to the caterpillar it simply appears that things are sliding backward.
And those who have explored deeply into time have very different experiences. We feel a moment went, another came, then a third, a fourth, a fifth; this went, that came. But the one who stands in the present suddenly discovers—suddenly discovers—that time is standing where it is; I am moving. The fundamental difference that appears is this: “Time is where it is—where would time go?” Have you ever thought of it? If time goes, where would it go? You say, “Yesterday went into the past.” The past—where? Is it preserved somewhere? Is it stored somewhere? Is there a place it has gone to?
If there is some place, then someday we will find a door and reach back again. The day you were born—we would catch hold of that day. Then great trouble would arise: both events would be there—you are present here now, and you are being born there. If we caught that event by going to that place, you would be being born and you would be present now. How can both things be together? Then a man would be dying and being born at once—both can be caught together. If the past goes and gathers in some room, it would be a great mess. And then where does the future come from? In the end, for things to come, there should be somewhere to come from. If something is coming, the very notions of coming and going are because of our dimension. The truth is exactly the opposite. The truth is that we are moving. Things are stationary where they are; we are moving. And here we are one-dimensional; we cannot turn back.
As if a man’s neck were stiff and he couldn’t look back—that is how human being-ness is: he cannot turn back; nor can he go ahead. He can only see where he is; that much he can see. The focus advances only that far. There is every possibility that someone rises above this focus—and can see those things that have not yet happened. That is what “trikalajna” means: knower of the three times.
If a man goes outside of time, he can see those things that for others will happen later—meaning, for those whose focus has not yet reached there. Suppose I am sitting under a tree and you are sitting at the top of the tree. There is a road; an ox cart is coming on it. I cannot see it; the man up in the tree says, “An ox cart is coming.” I say, “There is no ox cart yet; it is in the future—I can’t see it.” For him it is the present. From that height he is seeing where the cart has already arrived. On an even taller tree there could be someone for whom the cart has arrived even earlier. Then the cart will come before me; I will say, “Now it is present.” Then the cart will go past; I will say, “It has become the past.” The man in the tree will say, “Not yet; it is still here—I can see it.” The man higher up can still see it. In truth, if a few experiments are done with time, astonishing experiences happen—very surprising. The great surprise is this: time does not move; we move. And our focus is limited.
Take this room, and a man has a telescope. He starts from that corner. In his telescope you, number one, are visible. He says, “The present has arrived.” But Shanti Babu is in the future. Then he moves forward. The first person passes out of his telescope; he says, “He has gone into the past.” Shanti Babu has come into focus; he says, “The present has arrived.” In a little while Shanti Babu will depart. He keeps moving forward. He will pass through the whole room. He will say, “Some things went, some things kept coming, some things were.” But then the man throws down the telescope, breaks it, and looks all around; the whole room becomes visible to him. Then he says, “This is astonishing. What we said had gone—is also here. What we said was going to be—is also here. What we said is—is also here. Because now everything is here.” Now he sees the whole room simultaneously.
In reality, consciousness has many layers, and our mind is like a small hole, a focus through which we look. But the fact is: nothing comes, nothing goes. Nothing comes, nothing goes—we are going. Existence is standing where it is; we are circling. And what comes into our sight becomes the present. And if we stand still in the present—for there is only one way for us to be still: to stand in the present. We cannot stand on the future; it has not yet come—how would we stand on it? We say, “We will stand tomorrow, when it comes.” Nor can we stand on the past. Everything is standing; it was our movement that created the illusion that everything was moving. And remember, because we are moving in this direction, time appears to us to be moving in that direction.
Like a man running, the house beside him seems to be rushing backward. The man stops, and the house also stands still. He says, “How amazing—when I stood still, the house stood still.” The truth is the house was already standing; only you were running. Because of your running, an opposite motion appeared—both sides seemed to be moving—which was purely illusory. And Shankaracharya and others who are completely against time say that time is the greatest illusion. And there is one point that perhaps never occurred to you: whoever has progressed in the direction of moksha, the soul, the supreme, will always lay down one condition: it is beyond time—timeless. Whether you call it moksha, Brahman, or the self—it will be outside time. And all our experience is within time.
“You took a long time coming.” “No—we have been waiting a long while.” “Shanti Babu comes very quickly. Please, sit. How is your health? You certainly took your time...” After all, if one cannot go empty-handed to a sadhu, then where else can one go empty-handed?
Absolutely right. In fact, in fact, there are two poles. Wherever you start, you arrive at the other. And that is why I say: keep your attention on the breath. In Japan they teach children a very fine thing from childhood. They do not tell a child, “Do not be angry.” They say, “When anger arises, breathe strongly.” And if you breathe strongly, you cannot be angry at the same time. It is an impossibility. If there is a rhythm in the breath, then you cannot be angry, because the rhythm of anger would have to break. That is a very intelligent point. That is to say, if it does not break, you will not be able to be angry; and if you do not get angry, it will not break. And our whole body and mind are not such very separate things. It is as if the same thing has entered more deeply within.
Not for concentration; I am not doing it even for concentration. The moment you become quiet, the activity, the movement closest to your consciousness is the breath. Then all other movements are far away. Everything is at a distance. The nearest movement is the movement of the breath. But we are so entangled outside that we do not even notice the movement of the breath. As soon as we grow silent, that movement will be noticed.
In my view, there is no ego other than the ego of knowledge. Not of wealth, not of fame, not of position—those are not the real ego. But the amusing thing is: the so-called knower has saved himself and proved everyone else to be egotistical. If we do not know, we should say, “We do not know.” And what we can do is only this much: to say, “We do not know.” Then even in that child the sense will begin to grow that he too does not know.
Because it is the pain of not knowing that leads one into the search. No one else is ever going to give him the answer. Neither you can give it, nor can I. Someday he himself will receive the answer. So that he may receive it, let us not create any obstacles—that is all we can do.
I was just speaking of Lawrence. He is walking in a garden; a small child is with him, and the child asks, “Why are the trees green?” Lawrence says, “The trees are green because they are green.” The child protests, “What kind of mad answer is that? Is that an answer—that the trees are green because they are green?” Lawrence says, “That is the only answer I know. Beyond that—beyond that—I am ignorant.” Such a man is utterly honest.
In my view, in the search for truth—if there is truth anywhere—such a person may reach it. But those who already “know” can never reach; those who sit as if they know already. The pundit never arrives; he cannot. A sinner can arrive—because a sinner can be humble; a pundit cannot be humble. Yet we find it very hard to admit that we do not know—very hard.
There is an anecdote about Nasruddin. The emperor of his town had him seized and summoned. He said, “I have decided that from tomorrow—tomorrow is my birthday—falsehood will be banned in the capital. Whoever speaks untruth will be hanged on the gallows.” Nasruddin asked, “Where is your gallows? Because I want to be the very first to come tomorrow morning.” The king said, “Right at the city gate stands the gallows. Interrogation will be held there. Whoever is caught lying will be hanged at the gate so that the whole town can see.” Nasruddin said, “Then we shall meet at the gate tomorrow morning.” The king added, “I had called you to ask whether what I am doing is right.” Nasruddin replied, “That will be settled tomorrow, right there.” Nasruddin is a very marvelous man.
In the morning the gate opened and Nasruddin, sitting on his donkey, was the first to enter. The king asked, “Where are you going so early?” Nasruddin said, “To be hanged.” The king exclaimed, “This is a real quandary—you are plainly lying.” Nasruddin replied, “Then hang a liar.” The king said, “But then I shall be in great trouble—by hanging you, you will turn out to have spoken the truth.” Nasruddin said, “Then decide as you see fit—should I go on or should I stay?” The emperor said, “You have put me in a real fix.” Nasruddin said, “So it is not yet decided what truth is and what falsehood is, and you are handing out the gallows? Do not get into this tangle at all; it is not so easy to determine. As for me, I am ignorant. You summoned me to ask, and I said I would reveal my ignorance right at the gate in the morning. Now if you are the knowledgeable one, do as you think proper—I am ready to go to the gallows.”
In fact, children’s questions are always true, and the elders’ answers are always false. This is the ongoing struggle between children and elders. A child has no reason to ask falsely; when he asks, he asks rightly. And we do not have the answers—there are so many things for which man has no answer. So we should accept that there is no answer. But no one is ready to admit that he does not have an answer. Because we refuse to admit it, we have erected so many systems of philosophy. Children raised the questions; elders supplied the answers. But all those answers are false. The first thing about truth is: what is not known is not known. It is not right to say otherwise. And the motives behind what we are doing should also be stated clearly: “We are doing this because...”
If we practice just this much honesty, then in my understanding the child will find a way, and we too will find a way. Because children place us in the very situation we are actually in—but which we never accept. They often shove us to the point where it becomes clear that we are ignorant. But then we dust off our clothes, don our robes, and stand erect again; we arrange things and declare that we know everything. But for how long?
If you look very closely, is it really the children who are asking you? Think carefully: it is your own simplicity that is asking; it is your own childhood that keeps asking again and again. The lies we have draped ourselves in, having forgotten our childhood in every way—those very lies are being challenged again and again. And whenever that inner child asks, all our punditry shakes—because it is standing on sheer falsity; it has no meaning.
I say: let yourself fall. For the future of humanity, the happiest event would be that man accepts his ignorance and stops weaving webs of futile knowledge. Then it may even happen that among the millions of things we do not know, one or two we might come to know—that too may happen. And at least one thing is certain: even if we come to know nothing at all, this acceptance of ignorance—such a person can at least know himself. Because then he does not hammer in any hypotheses or doctrines. No—do not give any answers. And do not ask anyone for answers.
That child has raised good questions. Do not spoil him by giving bad answers. Deepen his questions. Tell him, “I don’t know either, and I too want to ask this—but whom should I ask? Here, I ask you the same.” What harm is there in that? Must it be that only children ask and elders answer? Is it necessary? Is it necessary? This is just our old notion—that elders give answers and children ask questions. It is not necessary. Everything can be reversed; very often it is. Not knowing is not knowing. And in my view, if we even come to this much understanding—that we don’t know—a joy descends for which there is no measure, because we become utterly light.
Ouspensky once went to meet Gurdjieff. When he met him, his book had already become world-famous. One of his books is truly remarkable: Tertium Organum. It is said there have been only three such books in the world: Aristotle’s Organon; Bacon’s Novum Organum; and Ouspensky’s Tertium Organum—the first organon, the new organon, and the third organon. That book had appeared, and it is very extraordinary.
He went to meet a simple, poor fakir named Gurdjieff in a village. Friends had urged him to go. He asked, “What will he teach me?” They said, “Teach you—perhaps not; but what he can do is strip you of your illusion of having learned. Teaching—perhaps not. But what he can take away is your delusion that you already know.”
Out of mere curiosity Ouspensky went. A long time passed; Gurdjieff sat silently, ten or fifteen others sat silently too. Ouspensky grew restless: no one spoke, no one asked, no one answered. He had thought that when some conversation started he would also ask. He became nervous and whispered to the neighbor who had brought him, “Shall I ask something?” The man said, “Among these people you will prove yourself very ignorant if you ask, because here the business of questions and answers has ended. These people have reached the place where things simply are.” Ouspensky thought, “Is that so? No answers?” Still he protested inwardly, “What is he saying? There can be answers to everything.”
So he said to Gurdjieff, “I want to ask something.” Gurdjieff picked up a slip of paper, handed it to him, and said, “Write on this that whatever you are about to ask—you yourself do not know what the very words mean. And if you do know, then do not trouble me needlessly; to make the known known is very difficult. Write here only what you do not know; then regarding that I will say something to you—because the one who does not know is able to hear.”
Ouspensky has written: “I had never been in such difficulty. I had written big books, but writing on that small slip became very hard. I would lift the pen—what should I write? Do I know God? The answer came, No, I don’t—and I have written books on God. Do I know the soul? The answer came, Where? I have no idea—and I have written treatises on self-knowledge, and people come to consult me. I was in a real fix. Slowly the ten or twelve people sitting silently began to laugh—laughing loudly—and sweat was pouring from me. Gurdjieff said, ‘Write quickly. Whatever you do know—even a little—write it, so I may at least recognize what you do know; then we will go further. And about what you do not know, we will speak.’ Their laughter, my sweat—it was a cold night. I handed the paper back and said, ‘Please take this back. I do not have the courage to claim that I know anything.’” Gurdjieff laughed heartily; they all laughed heartily...
“I am searching—and you also search. If you find out, let me know; and if I find out, I will tell you. But right now it is not known—right now it is not known.” If there is even this much simplicity, then a real search can begin. Then father and son become friends; they set out together on an inquiry. Tomorrow, if the child discovers something, he will tell. And who knows—he may discover it before you; nothing is fixed. In one way or another, your knowing attitude will crack, it will shatter completely. And when it shatters, a great event takes place.
Osho's Commentary
So I am completely against becoming one. Completely against absorption. What I say is the very opposite. I say: be aware of the present—not become one. Awareness of the present, not identity. Of that present moment which is passing by us, be totally aware. Then, in being aware of this present moment, it often appears that it concerns the future; yet the issue may well be in the present.
For example, I have to catch a train tomorrow. But the ticket has to be bought today. The train I will catch only tomorrow—today there is no way to catch it. But the ticket I will not buy tomorrow; I will buy it today. So when you think of catching the train tomorrow and buying the ticket today, in truth you are thinking about a present problem, not about the future. Thinking about the future would mean: you have to catch the train tomorrow and you sit here today, and in imagination you have already boarded it; you have begun to travel, and you start wondering, “What if there is an accident?” Then you have gone into the future. Do you understand what I mean? The problem is today; even a problem ten years away can be today.
And if the problem is today, then you should awaken to it today, taking it as part of the present. It is indeed part of the present. What we often do, in the name of the future, is miss the present. Understand this: you are to meet a friend tomorrow—so the decision has to be made today, that tomorrow we will meet at such-and-such place; this is today’s issue. But once that is finished, you sit on your chair and you start meeting the friend—who is not present. The friend who is not present cannot be met today. Yes, in this imaginary meeting you will lose awareness of the present. Because that is falling asleep into imagination; it is a kind of dream. So when I say, “Be awake to the present,” I do not mean I am saying that for you there is no tomorrow.