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Topic : OBJECT
Title
- Three looking techniques
Meditation
-
Look at an object as a whole
Sutra
(Technique)
- Look upon a bowl without seeing the sides or the material. In a few moments become aware.
Audio -
Available
Suggestion
-Look
at anything. A bowl or any object will do, but
look with a different quality. Look upon a bowl
without seeing the sides or the material. Look
upon any object, but with these two conditions...
Do not look at the sides, look at the object as
a whole. Ordinarily, we look at parts. It may not
be done so consciously, but we look at parts. If
I look at you, first I see your face, then your
torso, and then your whole body. Look at an object
as a whole; do not divide it in parts. Why? Because
when you divide something in parts, the eyes have
an opportunity to move from one part to another.
Look at a thing as a whole. You can do it.
I can look at all of you in two ways. I can look
from this side and then move. I can look at A,
then at B, then I look at C and go on moving. When
I look at A, B and C, I am not present -- or just
present on the fringe, but not focused. When I
look at B, I am leaving A. When I look at C, A
has been completely lost; he has gone out of my
focus. I can look at this group in this manner,
but I can look at the whole group without dividing
it into individuals, into units, taking it as a
whole.
Try it. First look at a thing moving from one
fragment to another. Then suddenly look at this
thing as a whole; do not divide it. When you look
at a thing as a whole, the eyes have no need to
move. In order not to give any opportunity for
movement, this has been made a condition: look
at an object totally, taken as a whole. And secondly,
without seeing the material. If the bowl is of
wood, do not see the wood: just see the bowl, the
form. Do not see the substance.
It may be of gold, it may be of silver -- observe
it. Do not look at the material of which it is
made, just look at the form. The first thing is
to look at it as a whole. Secondly, look at it
as a form, not as a substance. Why? Because substance
is the material part, form is the spiritual part,
and you are to move from the material to the non-material.
It will be helpful.
Try it. You can try it with anyone. Some man or
some woman is standing: look, and take the man
or woman wholly into your look, totally into it.
It will be a weird feeling in the beginning because
you are not habituated this way, but it is very
beautiful in the end. And then, do not think about
whether the body is beautiful or not, white or
black, man or woman. Do not think; just look at
the form. Forget the substance and just look at
the form.
In a few moments become aware. Go on looking at
the form as a whole. Do not allow the eyes any
movement. Do not start thinking about the material.
What will happen? You will suddenly become aware
of your self. Looking at something, you will become
aware of your self. Why? Because for the eyes there
is no possibility to move outwards. The form has
been taken as a whole, so you cannot move to the
parts. The material has been dropped; pure form
has been taken. Now you cannot think about gold,
wood, silver, etc.
A form is pure form. No thinking about it is possible.
A form is just a form; you cannot think about it.
If it is of gold, you can think many things. You
would like, you may like to steal it, or to do
something with it, or to sell it, or you can think
about the price -- many things are possible. But
of pure form, no thinking is possible. Pure form
stops thinking. And there is no possibility of
changing from one part to another; you have taken
it as a whole.
Remain with the whole and the form. Suddenly you
will become aware of yourself, because now the
eyes cannot move. And they need movement; that
is their nature. So your look will move toward
you. It will come back, it will return home, and
suddenly you will become aware of your self. This
becoming aware of one's self is one of the most
ecstatic moments possible. When for the first time
you become aware of your self, it has such beauty
and such bliss that you cannot compare it with
anything else you have known.
Really, for the first time you become your self;
for the first time you know you are. Your being
is revealed in a flash.
But why does it happen? You might have seen, in
children's books particularly, a picture, or in
some psychological treatises, but I hope everyone
must have seen somewhere or other -- a picture
of an old woman, and in the same lines a beautiful
young woman is also hidden. There is one picture,
the same lines, but two figures are in it: one
old woman, one young woman.
Look at the picture: you cannot become aware of
both simultaneously. You will become aware either
of one or the other. If you have become aware of
the old woman, you cannot see where the young woman
is hiding. But if you try to find her, it will
be difficult, and the very effort will become a
barrier. Because you have become aware of the old
woman, she will have become a fixed thing in your
eyes. With this fixed thing, you are trying to
find the young woman. It is impossible, you will
not be able to find her. You have to do a technique.
Just stare at the old woman; forget the young
woman completely. Stare at the old woman, at the
old woman figure. Stare! Go on staring. Suddenly
the old woman will disappear, and you will become
aware of the young woman hiding there. Why? If
you try to find her you will miss. This type of
picture is given to children like a puzzle, and
it is said to them, "Find the other." Then
they start trying to find her, and because of that
they miss.
The trick is not to try to find her: just stare
at the figure and you will become aware. Forget
the other, no need to think about it. Your eyes
cannot remain at one point, so if you stare at
the old woman figure the eyes will become tired.
Then suddenly they will move from the figure, and
in that movement you will become aware of the other
figure which is hidden just by the old woman's
side, in the same lines. But the miracle is that
when you become aware of the young woman, you cannot
see the old woman. But you know that both are there
now.
In the beginning you may not have believed that
the young woman is hiding, but now you know because
you have seen the old woman first. Now you know
that the old woman is there, but while looking
at the young one you cannot simultaneously become
aware of the old one. And if you become aware of
the old one, you will miss the young are again.
Both cannot be seen simultaneously; you can see
only one at a time.
The same happens with the outside and the inside
look. You cannot have both looks simultaneously.
When you are looking at a bowl or at any object,
you are looking out: the consciousness is moving
out, the river is flowing out. You are focused
on the bowl. Go on staring at it. That very staring
will create the opportunity to move in. Your eyes
will become tired; they would like to move. Finding
nothing to move out toward, suddenly the river
will turn back -- that remains the only possibility.
You will have forced your consciousness to fall
back. And when you will become aware of you, you
will miss the bowl; it will not be there.
That is why a Shankara or a Nagarjuna says the
whole world is illusory; they have known it so.
When we come to know ourselves, the world is not.
Really, the world is not illusory; it is there.
But you cannot see both worlds simultaneously --
that is the problem. So when a Shankara enters
into himself, when he comes to know his self, when
he becomes a witness, the world is not there. So
he is right. He says it is maya -- illusion. It
simply appears to be; it is not there.
Be aware of the fact. When you know the world,
you are not. You are there, but hidden, and you
cannot believe that you are hidden there; the world
is too much present for you. And if you start to
look for yourself directly, it will be difficult,
the very effort may become a barrier. So tantra
says, fix your stare somewhere in the world, on
any object, and do not move from there, remain
there. This very effort to remain there will create
the possibility for the consciousness to begin
to flow upwards -- backwards. Then you will become
aware of your self.
But when you become aware of your self, the bowl
will not be there. It is there, but FOR YOU it
will not be there. So Shankara says the world is
illusory because when you come to know your self
the world is not there. It disappears like a dream.
But Charwak and Epicurus and Marx, they are also
right. They say the world is true, and your self
is just false; it is nowhere to be found. They
say science is real. Science says only matter is,
only objects are; there is no subject. They are
right, because the eyes are focused on the object.
A scientist is constantly focusing on objects.
He forgets the self completely. Both Shankara and
Marx are right in one sense and wrong in another.
If you are fixed upon the world, if your look is
fixed on the world, the self will look illusory
-- like it is just a dream. If you are looking
inwards, the world will become a dream. Both are
real, but you cannot be aware of both simultaneously
-- that is the problem. And nothing can be done.
You will meet the old woman or you will meet the
young woman, and one will become maya, illusory.
But this technique can be used easily. It will
take a little time, but it is not difficult.
Once you know the turning of consciousness, you
can do it anywhere. Just riding in a bus or sitting
in a train you can do it -- anywhere. No need of
a bowl or any particular object: you can do it
with anything. With anything, stare, stare, stare...
and suddenly turn inwards, and the train disappears.
Of course, when you come back from your inner journey
you will have traveled, but the train will have
disappeared. From one station you will reach to
another, and in between there will have been no
train -- just a gap. Of course, the train was there;
otherwise how can you come to the other station?
But it was not there for you; for you it was not.
Those who can practice this technique, they can
live in the world very easily. Any moment they
can make anything disappear -- remember this. You
are bothered with your wife or with your husband
-- you can have her or him disappear. The wife
is there sitting just by your side and she is not
there. She is maya, she has disappeared. Just by
staring and then turning your consciousness inwards,
she has ceased to be there. And it has happened
many times.
I remember Socrates. His wife Xanthippe was very
much worried about him, and any wife would have
been in the same dilemma. To have a Socrates as
a husband is one of the most difficult things to
tolerate. Socrates is good as a teacher, but not
as a husband.
One day it happened... and because of it his wife
has been condemned for two thousand years continuously,
but that is not just, I do not think she has done
anything wrong. Socrates was sitting there, and
he must have been doing something like this technique
-- it is not recorded, I am just assuming. His
wife came with a tray, a teapot to give him tea.
She must have found that he was not there, so it
is reported that she poured the tea upon Socrates,
over his face. Then suddenly he came back.
His face remained burned for his whole life. And
because of this his wife has been condemned very
much, but no one knows what Socrates was doing
there -- because no wife would do this suddenly,
there is no need. He must have done something;
something must have been happening there. That
is why Xanthippe had to throw tea over him. He
must have been in an inner trance, and the burning
sensation of the tea must have brought him back,
the consciousness must have returned.
I assume that this was the case because there
are many other cases reported about Socrates which
are similar. For forty-eight hours he was not found.
He was sought all over, the whole Athens went in
search of Socrates, but he was not to be found
anywhere. Then he was found outside the city, miles
away, standing under a tree. Half of his body was
just under snow. Snow was falling, and he was just
frozen, standing there with open eyes. But he was
not looking at anyone.
When the crowd gathered around, they looked into
his eyes and they thought that he was dead. His
eyes were just like stones -- looking, but not
looking at anyone; just static, unmoving. They
felt his heart: It was beating slowly; he was alive.
They had to give him shocks, only then did he come
back to look at them. Immediately he asked, "What
is the time now?" He had missed forty-eight
hours completely, they never existed for him. He
was not in this world of time and space.
So they asked, "What were you doing? We thought
you were dead already... forty-eight hours!" He
said, "I was staring at the stars, and just
suddenly it happened that the stars disappeared.
And then, I don't know... then the whole world
disappeared. But I remained in such a cool, calm,
blissful state that if it is death it is worth
thousands of lives. If it is death, then I would
like to enter it again and again."
It may have happened without his knowledge, because
Socrates was not a yogi, not a tantric. He was
not in any way concerned consciously with any spiritual
practice. But he was a great thinker, and it may
have happened as an accident that he was staring
at the stars in the night, and suddenly his look
returned back, inwards. You can do it. And stars
are really good objects.
Lie down on the ground, look at the black sky,
and then fix yourself on one star. Concentrate
on it, stare at it. Narrow down your consciousness
to one star; forget other stars. By and by, concentrate,
narrow down your gaze. Other stars will be there
just on the fringe, on the boundary. But by and
by they will disappear, and only one star will
remain. Then go on staring, go on staring. A moment
will come when that star will disappear. And when
that star disappears, you will appear to yourself.
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