• I don’t believe in nationalism, and I don’t believe in any religion. I believe in the individual and his happiness.
    - Osho

open all | close all

oshofriends




 

Osho MeditationMeditation TechniquesMeditative TherapiesVigyan Bhairav Tantraon Osho Techniqueson Shiva's 112 TechniquesTalks on Meditation

 

oshofriends

 

 

 

Question 1:

Osho,

Paltudas says, “every art takes place in its own time, so why get impatient? no matter how much you water it, the tree comes into fruition in its own time.”

Osho, please say something about impatience on the spiritual path. Is impatience an essential part of human growth? please comment.

 

 

It is true that everything takes place in its own time — but it is only half true.

 

Paltudas says, “Every art takes place in its own time, so why get impatient? No matter how much you water it, the tree comes into fruition in its own time.” But that does not mean that you need not water the tree; that does not mean that you have not to sow the seeds. The seeds have also to be sown in time — only then will the fruits come in their own time.

 

What Paltudas is saying is only half of the whole thing. From the seed to the fruit is a long journey, and great patience is needed on the part of the gardener. But the patience must not become laziness, because the difference is very delicate and very fine. The patience should remain, in its heart of hearts, very impatient — knowing perfectly well that when the spring comes, flowers will come. That does not mean you have to forget longing, desiring, for the spring to come; praying, waiting, for the spring to come. Wait — but your waiting should not be a dullness on your part.

 

The guest will come — and one never knows when the guest will come; but wait like a lover, with doors open, eyes fixed on the road… as if the next moment is going to be the meeting with the guest, with the friend.

 

On the spiritual path, things which ordinarily appear contradictory become complementary. Be impatiently patient, or be patiently impatient; but both have to be together. If you choose one, there is danger. Patience alone is going to become laziness; impatience alone is going to become unnecessary anguish, anxiety. They both are needed, balanced; so impatience keeps you longing, waiting, and patience keeps you from becoming tense, from creating anxiety. Both have their parts to fulfill on the spiritual path.

 

And it is not only so about this contradiction; about many other contradictions the same is true. One has to be both together, in deep harmony. What do you think this is about — the gardener? Paltudas has forgotten completely that the real question is about the seed, not about the gardener, because the gardener is going to remain the same; there is going to be no growth, spiritual or unspiritual. The growth is going to happen to the seed, and if the seed is too patient it will die; it will lose the very longing to live, the zest for living.

 

Long months have to pass before the rains will come. If it becomes too patient, it will die before even being born. It needs a certain impatience on the part of the seed — a tremendous desire to grow, to blossom, to come to fruition.

 

But even if there is tremendous desire and longing for growth, it will happen in its own time. Your longing cannot arrange that the spring comes a little sooner, but it can keep you awake — so that when the spring comes, you are not fast asleep and dead.

 

The seed has to continue to dream, desire… has to remain discontent as it is, because this is not its destiny, it is only a potential — otherwise it is empty. Everything is going to happen in the future, so it has to be alert, hopeful, aware of the unknown, listening to the footsteps of the spring coming. And on the other hand it has to be patient, because there is nothing it can do to bring the rains or to bring the spring — they will come in their own time.

 

So if the seed can keep a balance between patience and impatience, it will remain alive, and it will also not go mad. Too much impatience can make you insane, and too much patience can make you one of the living dead. Both are needed in the right proportions: a deep harmony between the contradictions, so they are transformed into complementaries. On the spiritual path a deep harmony is needed with every step — a little imbalance and you will be lost. And that’s what your religions have been teaching you: they have been teaching you imbalance, not balance. They have been telling you to choose between two contradictions.

 

I say unto you: Never choose.

 

Remain choiceless. Both are yours. Use them — and use them in such a way that they both create a beautiful music in your heart. It looks very strange to say, but nothing can be done about the mysteries of life.

 

I can only say — even if I appear to be very contradictory — be patiently impatient, or be impatiently patient — but be both.

 

- Osho, “The Rebellious Spirit, #7, Q1”

 

 

 

TAG •

  1. No Image

    Learn waiting, pure waiting : Impatience is lack of trust.

    Question 2 : At times I feel like I can just sit silently and wait for eternity – and other times like sobbing with the futility of sitting outside a gate I cannot even see – frozen between action and inaction. Does one miss by demanding? Is impatience a lack of trust? One misses only by de...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  2. No Image

    A long journey

    Coming to me is a long journey. Many times you will feel that you have come and again I will make you aware that it is yet to happen; it is always ′yet′. One is arriving and arriving and one never arrives. But that′s the beauty of it - it is an eternal growth - and once you have understood,...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  3. No Image

    On the path nothing more is needed than patience

    On the path nothing more is needed than patience. Man can do everything that he is capable of, but still there is no necessity that the ultimate happens; it may happen, it may not. We can grope in the dark; the door may open, it may not So if one has not infinite patience, one starts gettin...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  4. No Image

    The patience must not become laziness

    Question 1: Osho, Paltudas says, “every art takes place in its own time, so why get impatient? no matter how much you water it, the tree comes into fruition in its own time.” Osho, please say something about impatience on the spiritual path. Is impatience an essential part of human growth? ...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  5. No Image

    Meditation happens only to those who are not result-oriented.

    The ego is result-oriented, the mind always hankers for results. The mind is never interested in the act itself, its interest is in the result. "What am I going to gain out of it?" If the mind can manage to gain, without going through any action, then it will choose the shortcut. That's why...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  6. No Image

    What is the difference between desire and longing?

    Question 2: What is the difference between desire and longing? Krishna, desire is desire for something that is outside you. Desire is objective. Longing is not objective. Longing is for that which wants to explode in you. It is inner, it is subjective. If a rose wants to become a lotus, it ...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  7. No Image

    Meditation cannot be a fragmented thing, it should be a continuous effort

    Meditation cannot be a fragmented thing, it should be a continuous effort. Every moment one has to be alert, aware and meditative. But the mind has played a trick: you meditate in the morning and then you put it aside; or you pray in the temple and then forget it. Then you come back to the ...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  8. No Image

    The greatest barrier to enlightenment is the longing for it

    Question 2: Since coming to you, living a meditative life has become an easier and more natural phenomenon. However, i have practically given up all hope for enlightenment. Are these tendencies contradictory? Not at all. To attain to enlightenment that is a must — that you should lose all h...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  9. No Image

    When you are waiting, you become, of course, more alert.

    Question 4 Osho, i turn at every sound to see if he is there. there is a great waiting full of joy inside me. Osho, where is the beloved one? PARMITA, HE IS EVERYWHERE! HE IS ALWAYS. He is here in me, in you, in all the people who have gathered here. But you must be looking for some God whi...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  10. No Image

    Patience is nothing but a fragrance of trust

    Deva means divine and dheeraj means patience — divine patience. And that is very significant to remember. On the path nothing more is needed than patience. Man can do everything that he is capable of, but still there is no necessity that the ultimate happens; it may happen, it may not. We c...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  11. No Image

    I have been thinking of becoming a Sannyasin for at least seven years. Why am I not able to take the jump?

    Question 2 I have been thinking of becoming a Sannyasin for at least seven years. Why am I not able to take the jump? It seems you are not aware of death at all. If you are aware of death you cannot postpone like that. And now, because you have been postponing for seven years, postponement ...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  12. No Image

    One has to learn to wait, pray and wait, meditate and wait

    Man has only to allow; bliss is always established by god. We can create misery but we cannot create bliss. Misery is within our hands, bliss is not. Bliss has to be allowed to happen. It is not a doing, it is a happening. The moment you surrender, misery starts disappearing and bliss is es...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  13. No Image

    Waiting : Meditation is waiting without prospect, waiting for waiting's sake.

    Waiting Enlightenment has not to be sought actively, to be brought about, because it is already there. Waiting is all that is needed: waiting, just waiting, TADA, with no object. If you are waiting for something, you are not waiting; then positive thinking has come in. If you are waiting fo...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  14. No Image

    Meditation needs tremendous effort

    YOU HAVE BEEN DOING THE MEDITATIONS VERY COURAGEOUSLY HERE. Back home, you may feel alone. But don’t feel it as a loneliness. If you are ready, I can help you there also. Just remember me, feel my presence, and then meditate. Space, distance, is meaningless if there is love. You may be sitt...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  15. No Image

    The waiting should be full of thrill, enthusiasm, trust, hope.

    Anand means bliss, vasant means spring – bliss spring. And when bliss comes it comes like a spring. It was not there and suddenly it is there; suddenly the whole climate is different. It takes you unawares. It comes very unexpectedly, and one never knows from where it will start and begin, ...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  16. No Image

    There is no way to it except by waiting, infinite patience

    JESUS SAID: TWO WILL REST ON A BED: THE ONE WILL DIE, THE ONE WILL LIVE. And it is up to you. If you want to remain in trouble, never pay attention to the inner one; if you want to remain always in anguish then remain on the periphery, don't look within. But if you want repose, a peaceful e...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  17. No Image

    You can be enlightened in a single minute; you can wait for forty years. It depends how gross you are

    Question 2: Why do Zen monks have to have been living near their masters for ten, twenty, or even for forty years for the sudden enlightenment to happen? Because of their stupidities. You can be enlightened in a single minute; you can wait for forty years. It depends how gross you are. You ...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  18. No Image

    on Hurry and Real Love – What youth knows is not love

    [A sannyasin says: “The distance between me and others, between me and you grows smaller so slowly.”] No need to force it; everybody has to follow his own pace. Great patience is needed — don’t be in a hurry. These things are not like seasonal flowers; they are like cedars of Lebanon: they ...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  19. No Image

    Consciousness is one of those things which you cannot grow quickly

    Question : Osho, On one occasion, Joshu said to his monks: I have single-heartedly practiced zazen in the southern province for thirty years. He is referring to those thirty years with his master, Nansen. He is saying, ”I have singleheartedly practiced zazen for thirty years continuously, w...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  20. No Image

    I’m in a hurry to become enlightened. What should i do?

    Question 3: Osho, I’m in a hurry to become enlightened. What should i do? Chitten, first just listen carefully to this small story. The plane had just taken off and the captain was telling the passengers about the altitude of the plane, the cruising speed etcetera. But he forgot to switch o...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  21. No Image

    Meditation needs infinite patience

    Ma Dhyan Agni. Dhyan means meditation, Agni means fire. Meditation is a fire. It does two things: it burns your past totally, it consumes your mind absolutely without even leaving a trace behind it, and your past contains everything — your religion, your politics, your nationality, your rac...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  22. No Image

    Longing in its purity is divine, Longing when it longs for nothing is divine

    Question 1: Osho, I don’t understand. You said that Longing is in and of itself divine. Yet you have often said that all desiring, even for god, is mundane and not spiritual. Deva Ashoka, longing in its purity is divine, longing when it longs for nothing is divine. The moment an object of t...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
  23. No Image

    You need determination, continuous effort and one more thing: infinite patience.

    One and only one moment of determination, of sankalpa, of complete determination is enough, whereas a whole life without it is nothing. Remember it is not time but determination that is the important thing. The achievements of the world are accomplished in the realm of time and those of tru...
    CategoryLonging, Patience, Waiting
    Read More
Board Pagination Prev 1 Next
/ 1