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Body | Do It Anywhere
| Mind
Title
- You are everywhere
Meditation
- Think of nothing
Inspiration
- Thinking no thing will limited-self unlimit.
Audio
– Not Available
Technique
- This
meditation is done by yourself. You won't need privacy.
It will not be obvious that you are meditating. Do the
technique anywhere suitable.
Thinking
no thing
Will
limited-self unlimit.
That's
what I was saying. If there is no object to your
attention, you are nowhere; or, you are everywhere, you
are free. You have become freedom. This second sutra
says: thinking no thing -- or, thinking nothing -- will
limited-self unlimit.
If
you are not thinking, you are unlimited. Thinking gives
you a limit, and there are many types of limits. You are
a Hindu -- it gives a limit. Hindu, to be a Hindu, is to
be attached to a thought, to a system, to a pattern. You
are a Christian -- then again you are limited. A
religious man cannot be a Hindu or a Christian. And if
someone is a Hindu or a Christian, he is not religious
-- impossible -- because these are thoughts. A religious
man means not thinking thoughts; not limited by any
thought, by any system, by any pattern; not limited by
the mind, living in the unlimited.
When
you have a certain thought, that thought becomes your
barrier. It may be a beautiful thought -- still it is a
barrier. A beautiful prison is still a prison. It may be
a golden thought but it makes no difference, it
imprisons you all the same. And whenever you have a
thought and you are attached to it, you are always
against someone, because barriers cannot exist if you
are not against someone. A thought is always a
prejudice; it is always for and against.
I
have heard about a very religious Christian man who was
a poor farmer. He belonged to the Society of Friends, he
was a Quaker. Quakers are non-violent; they believe in
love, in friendship. He was coming from the city to his
village on his mulecart, and suddenly, apparently
without any cause, the mule stopped and he would not
budge. He tried, he persuaded the mule in Christian
ways, he persuaded the mule in a very friendly way, a
non-violent way. He was a Quaker: he couldn't beat the
mule, he couldn't use strong words, he couldn't abuse,
scold, but he was filled with anger. But how to beat the
mule?
He
wanted to beat him, so he said to the mule, `Behave
rightly, because I am a Quaker -- I cannot beat you, I
cannot scold you, I cannot be violent -- but remember,
mule, that I can sell you to someone who is not a
Christian!'
The
Christian has his own world, and the non-Christian is
opposite. The Christian cannot conceive that the
non-Christian can reach the kingdom of God. A Hindu
cannot conceive, a Jain cannot conceive, that others can
enter into that realm of bliss -- impossible. Thought
creates a limitation, a barrier, a boundary, and all
those who are not for are taken to be against. One who
is not in agreement with me is against me.
How
can you be everywhere? You can be with the Christian;
you cannot be with the non-Christian. You can be with
the Hindu, but you cannot be with the non-Hindu, with
the Mohammedan. Thought is bound to be somewhere against
-- against someone or something. It cannot be total.
Remember: thought cannot be total; only no-thought can
be total.
Secondly:
thought is always from the mind, it is always a
by-product of the mind. It is your attitude, your
speculation, your prejudice; it is your reaction, your
formulation, your concept, your philosophy, but it is
not existence itself. It is something about the
existence; it is not existence itself.
A
flower is there. You can say something about it; that is
a thought. You can say it is beautiful, you can say it
is ugly, you can say it is sacred, but whatsoever you
say about the flower is not the flower. The flower
exists without your thoughts, and whenever you are
thinking about the flower, you are creating a barrier
between you and the flower.
The
flower doesn't need your thoughts. It exists. Drop your
thoughts, and then you can drop yourself into the
flower. Whatsoever you say about a rose is meaningless,
howsoever meaningful it appears, it is meaningless. What
you say is not needed. It is not giving any existence to
the flower. It is creating a film between you and the
flower; it is creating a limitation. So whenever there
is thought, you are debarred; the door is closed to
existence.
This
sutra says:
Thinking
no thing
Will
limited-self unlimit.
If
you don't think, if you simply are, fully alert, aware,
but without any clouds of thought, you are unlimited.
The body is not the only body -- a deeper body is the
mind. Body consists of matter; mind also consists of
matter -- subtle, more refined. Body is the outer layer,
mind is the inner layer. And it is easy to be detached
from the body. It is more difficult to be detached from
the mind, because with the mind you feel you are more
yourself.
If
someone says that your body looks ill, you don't feel
offended. You are not so attached; it is a little away
from you. But if someone says your mind seems to be
pathological, ill, you feel offended. He has insulted
you. With the mind you are nearer. If someone says
something about your body you can tolerate it. If
someone says something about your mind, it is impossible
to tolerate it, because he has hit deeper.
The
mind is the inner layer of the body. Mind and body are
not two: the outer layer of your body is the body and
the inner layer is the mind. Just as if you have a
house: you can see the house from the outside, and you
can see the house from the inside. From the outside the
outer layer of the walls will be seen; from the inside
the inner layer. The mind is your inner layer. It is
nearer to you, but it is still a body.
In
death your outer body drops, but you carry the inner,
subtle layer with you. You are so attached to it that
even death cannot separate you from your mind. Mind
continues. That's why your past births can be known,
because you are still carrying all the minds that you
ever had. They are there. If you were a dog once, the
dog mind is still with you. If you were a tree once, the
tree mind is still with you. If you once were a woman or
a man, you carry those minds. All the minds are carried
by you. You are so attached to them that you never lose
the grip.
In
death the outer dissolves, but the inner is carried. It
is a very subtle material thing. Really, just vibrations
of energy, thought vibrations. You carry them, and
according to your thought pattern that you carry, you
enter a new body. According to the thought pattern, the
desire pattern, the mind, you again create a new body
for yourself. The blue-print is in the mind, and the
outer layer is again accumulated.
The
first sutra is to put aside the body. The second sutra
is to put aside the mind, the inner body. Even death
cannot separate you -- only meditation can separate.
That's why meditation is a greater death, it is a deeper
surgery -- deeper than death itself. That's why so much
fear. People go on talking about meditation but they
will never do it. They will talk, they can write about
it, they can preach about it, but they will never do it.
A deep fear exists about meditation, and the fear is of
death.
Those
who do meditation, they come one day or another to the
point where they are scared, thrown back. They come to
me and they say, `Now we cannot enter more. It is
impossible.' A point comes where one feels that one is
dying. And that point is of a deeper death than any
death, because now the innermost is being separated; the
most inner identity is being shattered. One feels one is
dying; one feels now one is moving into non-existence. A
deep abyss opens, infinite emptiness opens. One is
scared, runs back to cling to the body so that one is
not thrown, because the earth beneath is moving, is
being removed. A valley is opening, a nothingness.
So
people, even if they try, they always try superficially;
they play with meditation. They are unconsciously aware
that if they move deep they will be no more. And that's
right, the fear is true -- you will not be yourself
again. Once you have known that abyss, that shoonya, the
void, you will not be the same again.
You
come back, but you are resurrected, a new man. The old
has disappeared. You cannot find even a trace of it, of
where it has gone. The old was the identity with the
mind. Now you cannot be identified with the mind. Now
you can use the mind, you can use the body, but they
have become instruments; you are above them. Whatsoever
you do, you can do, but you are not one with them. This
gives freedom. But this can happen only when thinking no
thing.
Hmm
-- this is very paradoxical -- thinking no thing. You
can think about things. How can you think about no
thing? What does this `no thing' mean? And how can you
think about it? Whenever you think about something it
becomes a thing, it becomes an object, it becomes a
thought, and thoughts are things. How can you think no
thing? You cannot, but in the very effort -- the effort
to think no thing -- thinking will be lost, thinking
will be dissolved.
You
may have heard about Zen koans. Zen masters give an
absurd puzzle to the seeker to think about -- and it is
something which cannot be thought. It is given knowingly
just to stop thinking. For example, they say to the
seeker: `Go and find out what your original face is: the
face you had when you were not born. Don't think about
this face which you have got; think of the face you had
before birth.
'How
can you think about it? There was no face before birth;
the face comes with the birth. The face is part of the
body. You have no face; only the body has a face. Close
your eyes and you have no face. You know about your face
through the mirror. You have not seen it yourself, and
you cannot see it, so how can one think about the
original face?> But one can try; the very effort will
help.
The
seeker will try and try -- and it is impossible. He will
come to the master again and again, asking, `Is this the
original face?' And before he says it to the master, the
master says, `It is wrong. Whatsoever you bring is going
to be wrong.'
For
months together the seeker comes again and again. He
finds something, imagines something, and he sees the
face -- `The original face is like this?' And the master
says, `No.' And every time this `No, no', and by and by
he becomes more and more puzzled. He cannot think. He
tries and tries and tries and fails -- that failure is
the basic thing. One day he comes to a total failure.
All thinking stops in that total failure and he comes to
realize that the original face cannot be thought.
Thinking stops.
And
whenever this last time happens to a seeker, when he
comes to the master, the master says, `Now there is no
need. I see the original face.' The eyes have become
vacant. The seeker has come not to say something, but
just to be near the master. He has not found any answer.
There was none. He has come for the first time without
the answer. There is no answer to it. He comes silently.
Every
time he had come he had some answer. The mind was there,
the thought was there -- he was limited by that thought.
He had found or imagined some face -- he was limited by
that face. Now he has become original; now there is no
limit. Now he has got no face, no idea, no thought. He
has come without any mind. This is the state of no-mind.
In
this state of no-mind, the limited-self unlimits. The
limits are dissolved. Suddenly you are everywhere,
suddenly you are everyone. Suddenly you are in the tree
and in the stone and in the sky and in the friend and in
the enemy -- suddenly you are everywhere. The whole
existence has become just a mirror -- you are
everywhere, mirrored. This state is the state of bliss.
Now nothing can disturb you, because nothing exists
except you. Now nothing can destroy you; nothing exists
except you. Now there is no death, because even in death
you are. Now nothing is opposed to you. Alone, you
exist.
This
aloneness Mahavir has called kaivalya, total aloneness.
Why alone? -- because everything is involved, absorbed,
has become you. You can express this state in two ways.
You can say, `Only I am. Aham Brahmasmi -- I am the God,
the divine, the total. Everything has come unto me; all
the rivers have dissolved into my ocean. Alone I exist.
Nothing else exists.' Sufi mystics say this, and
Mohammedans could never understand why Sufis say such
things. A Sufi says, `There is no God. Alone I exist.'
Or, `I am the God.' This is a positive way of saying
that now no separation is there. Buddha uses a negative
way. He says, `I am nor more. Nothing exists.'
Both
are true, because when everything is included in me,
there is no sense in calling myself. The I is always
opposed to the you; I is always opposed to thou. In
relation to you it is meaningful. When there is no you,
I becomes meaningless. So Buddha says there is no I,
nothing exists. Either everything has become you, or you
have become a non-being and you dissolve into
everything.
Both
the expressions are true. Of course, no expression can
be totally true, that's why the opposite expression is
always also true. Every expression is partial, part;
that's why the opposite expression is also true -- that
too is part of it. Remember this. Whatsoever you express
may be true and the opposite also may be true -- the
very opposite. Really, it is bound to be true, because
every expression is only a part.
And
there are two types of expression: you can choose the
positive or you can choose the negative. If you choose
the positive, the negative seems to be untrue. It is
not; it is complementary. It is not really opposed to
it. So whether you say Brahma -- the total -- or you say
Nirvana -- the nothingness -- it is the same. Both
connote the same experience, and the experience is this
-- thinking no thing, you come to know it.
Some
basic things have to be understood about this technique.
One: thinking, you are separated from existence.
Thinking is not a relation, it is not a bridge, it is
not a communication -- it is a barrier. Non-thinking you
are related, bridged; you are in communion. When you are
talking to someone, you are not related. The very talk
becomes a barrier. The more you talk, the further away
you move. If you are with someone in silence, you are
related. If the silence is really deep and there are no
thoughts in your mind and both the minds are totally
silent, you are one.
Two
zeros cannot be two. Two zeros become one. If you add
two zeros they don't become two, they become a bigger
zero -- one. And, really, a zero cannot be bigger --
more big, or less big. A zero is simply a zero. You
cannot add something to it, you cannot deduct something
from it. A zero is whole. When ever you are silent with
someone, you are one. When you are silent with
existence, you are one with it.
This
technique says be silent with existence and then you
will know what God is. There is only one dialogue with
existence and that is in silence. If you talk with
existence, you miss. Then you are enveloped in your own
thoughts.
Try
this as an experiment. Try it with anything as an
experiment -- even with a rock. Be silent with it --
take it in your hand and be silent -- and there will be
a communion. You will move deep into the rock and the
rock will move deep into you. Your secrets will be
revealed to the rock and the rock will reveal its
secrets to you. But you cannot use language with it. The
rock doesn't know any language. Because you use
language, you cannot be related to it.
And
man has lost silence completely. When you are not doing
anything, then too you are not silent; the mind goes on
doing something or other. Because of this constant inner
talk, this continuous inner chattering, you are not
related to anything. Not even to your beloved ones are
you related, because this chattering goes on.
You
may be sitting with your wife: you are chattering in
your own mind; she is chattering in her own mind. Both
are chattering. They are far away from each other, poles
away. It is as if one is on one star, and the other on
another star, and there is infinite space between them.
Then they feel that the intimacy is not there, and then
they blame each other -- `You don't love me.'
This
is not the question really. Love is not possible. Love
is a flower of silence. It flowers only in silence,
because it flowers in communion. If you cannot be
without thoughts, you cannot be in love. And then to be
in prayer is impossible -- but even if we do prayer we
chatter. To us, prayer is just chattering with God.
We
have become so conditioned to chattering that even if we
go to the church or to the temple we continue chattering
there also. We chatter with God, we talk with God. This
is absolute nonsense. God, existence, cannot understand
your language. Existence understands only one language
-- that is of silence. And silence is neither Sanskrit
nor Arabic nor English nor Hindi. Silence is universal;
it doesn't belong to anyone.
There
are at least four thousand languages on earth, and
everyone is enclosed in his own language. If you don't
know his language you cannot be related to him. You
cannot be related. If I don't understand your language
and you don't understand my language, we cannot be
related. We are strangers. We cannot penetrate each
other, we cannot understand, we cannot love. This is
happening only because we don't know a basic universal
language -- that is silence.
Really
only through silence is one related. And if you know the
language if silence then you can be related to anything,
because rocks are silent, trees are silent, the sky is
silent -- it is existential. It is not only human, it is
existential. Everything knows what silence is;
everything exists in silence.
If
a rock is there in your hand, the rock is not chattering
within itself and you are chattering -- that's why you
cannot be related to the rock. And the rock is open,
vulnerable, inviting. The rock will welcome you, but you
are chattering and the rock cannot understand the
chattering -- that becomes the barrier. So even with
human beings you cannot be in a deep relationship; there
can be no intimacy. Language, words, destroy everything.
Meditation
means silence: not thinking about anything. Not thinking
at all, just being -- open, ready, eager to meet,
welcoming, receptive, loving, but not thinking at all.
Then infinite love will happen to you, and you will
never say that no one loves you. You will never say it,
you will never feel it. Now, whatsoever you do, you will
say this and you will feel this. You may not even say
it. You may pretend that someone loves you, but deep
down you know.
Even
lovers go on asking each other, `Do you love me?' In so
many ways they go on enquiring continuously. Everyone is
afraid, uncertain, insecure. In many ways they try to
find out whether really the lover loves them. And they
can never be certain, because the lover can say, `Yes, I
love you,' but it will not give any guarantee. How can
you be at ease? How can you know whether he is deceiving
you or not? He can argue, he can convince you. He can
convince you intellectually, but the heart will not be
convinced. So lovers are always in agony. They cannot be
convinced of the fact that the other loves. How can you
be convinced?
Really
there is no way to convince through language. And you
are asking through language, and while the lover is
there you are chattering in the mind, questioning,
arguing. You will never be convinced, and you will
always feel that you have not been loved, and this
becomes the deepest misery. And this is happening not
because someone is not loving you. This is happening
because you are closed in a wall. You are closed within
your thoughts; nothing can penetrate. The thoughts
cannot be penetrated unless you drop the. If you drop
them the whole existence penetrates you.
This
sutra says:
Thinking
no thing
Will
limited-self unlimit
You
will become unlimited. You will become whole. You will
become universal. You will be everywhere. And then you
are joy. Now you are nothing but misery. Those who are
cunning, they go on deceiving themselves that they are
not miserable, or they go on hoping that something will
change, something will happen, and they will achieve at
the end of life -- but you are miserable.
You
can create faces, deceptions, false faces; you can go on
smiling continuously, but deep down you know you are in
misery. That is natural. Confined in thoughts you will
be in misery. Unconfined, beyond thoughts -- alert,
conscious, aware, but unclouded by thoughts -- you will
be joy, you will be bliss.
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