• Be true to yourself, and don't look at what others are saying. This is the only way to reach to the Divine, because it is the only way to be natural.
    - Osho

open all | close all

oshofriends




oshofriends

 

 

 

Respond with Awareness

 

 

There were two temples in Japan, both antagonistic to each other. One belonged to Shinto, another belonged to Zen. And for centuries they had been quarreling, arguing against each other. Both had masters, and they both had young boys, because the masters were old and they needed somebody to help them, to bring vegetables or cook food. Those small boys helped them.

 

Both told the small boys, ”Don’t talk to the other boy of the other temple – never! We have been enemies for centuries, we are not on talking terms.”

 

But boys are boys, and because both were prevented, both were anxious... So one day, going to the market to fetch some vegetables, they met on the road. And one boy asked the other – this was the Shinto boy, coming from the Shinto temple. He asked the Zen boy, ”Where are you going?”

 

And the Zen boy said, ”Wherever the wind takes me.” He had been listening to his master, all kinds of things, so he had also got the taste of Zen. He said, ”Wherever the wind takes me.”

 

The Shinto boy was shocked at this. What to answer? He wanted to make friends, but this boy seemed to be completely uninterested; he had completely cut him short. There was no way for conversation – now what to say? He is saying, ”Wherever the wind takes me...”

 

Very sad, he came to his master and told him, ”I did not obey you, I am sorry. I was just inquisitive, curious to know about the other boy. I was feeling alone, and I thought he must be also feeling alone. And your temples may have been for centuries antagonistic, but we are just boys. We can be friends.

 

”But you were right; it was not good to ask. Certainly those people are dangerous. I asked the boy, ‘Where are you going?’ and he said, ‘Wherever the wind takes me.’”

 

The master said, ”I had warned you. Now tomorrow, you go again and stand at the same place, and when that Zen boy comes, you ask him again: ‘Where are you going?’ And when he says, ‘Wherever the wind takes me,’ just ask him, ‘If the wind is not blowing, then...?’”

 

The boy went. He stood at the same place, watched. The Zen boy was coming. He asked him, ”Where are you going?” And the boy said, ”Wherever the legs take me.”

 

Now he could not answer what the master said, ”If the wind is not blowing...” It would be absurd to answer that. He came very sad to the Shinto master and said, ”Those people are very strange! That boy changed his whole approach! I asked the same question, but he said, ‘Wherever the legs take me.’”

 

The master said, ”I have been warning you. Now you are unnecessarily getting defeated and that means a defeat for our temple. This is not good. You go again! And tomorrow you stand in the same place, and when the boy comes you ask, ‘Where are you going?’ and when he says ‘Wherever the legs take me,’ ask him: ‘If you were crippled, then would you go anywhere or not?’”

 

So, utterly happy, the boy went again, stood in the same place, watched. The boy came out of the temple. He asked, ”Where are you going?” utterly happy that now he knows the answer.

 

And the boy said, ”I am going to fetch some vegetables.” Now the situation again becomes absolutely different. He cannot say, ”If you were crippled...” he cannot say, ”If the wind is not blowing...” So he returned, very angry, and said to the master, ”Those people are strange! Even the boy is strange.”

 

The master said, ”I have been telling you, but you won’t understand.”

 

The story is exactly the same. The significance is that each moment is so new and so fresh that nothing old is to be repeated. That Zen boy has understood from his master and his constant dialogue with the disciples that nothing can be repeated, because the situation is never the same. So every moment you have to respond freshly – out of your consciousness, just like a mirror. If a mirror is there and you look into it, you will see your face. And if a monkey looks at it, then the monkey will see his face.

 

If a donkey looks at it, then the donkey will see his face. The mirror is the reflecting medium, it has no opinion. You cannot say that the mirror is very self-contradictory, that it is not consistent: sometimes it shows the face of a man, sometimes the monkey, sometimes the donkey, what kind of mirror is this? One should be consistent! Zen is not consistent with the past, but absolutely consistent with the present. Its consistency is a totally different phenomenon to anything that has happened anywhere in the world. It is unique.

 

- Osho, "God is Dead, Now Zen is the Only Living Truth, #7"

 

 


  1. No Image

    Master's Compassion

    Master's Compassion Sekito became a master of hundreds of people who became enlightened. He was a very hard master, almost dangerous to the disciples, but all his hardship came from a very loving heart, a very deep compassion. He wanted them to become enlightened, he did not allow them to escape. Once in a whi...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  2. No Image

    Zen Sage & Thief

    Zen Sage & Thief A sage is a person who has become enlightened. Now he has no choices. For him nothing is bad and nothing is good. He has become natural. He is, just like a tree or like a hill, like a river or like the ocean. He has no mind to say anything, to interpret. He doesn’t divide. It is said of one Ze...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  3. No Image

    The Game of Chess - Meditation requires only one thing: be absorbed in it totally, whatsoever it is.

    The Game of Chess If a rosebush starts trying to become a rosebush, it will go mad. It is ALREADY the rosebush. You may have forgotten. Zen says you are in a state of slumber, you have forgotten who you are, that’s all. Nothing has to be done, just a remembrance. That’s what Nanak calls SURATI, Kabir calls SUR...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  4. No Image

    The Fake Monk

    The Fake Monk There is a famous Zen story. I would like to tell it to you. A monk called himself the ’Master of Silence’. He was actually a fraud and had no genuine understanding. To sell his humbug Zen, he had two eloquent attendant monks to answer questions for him; but he himself never uttered a word, as if...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  5. No Image

    Hell and heaven are within you

    This story is beautiful. The Zen master Hakuin is one of the rare flowerings. A warrior came to him, a samurai, a great soldier, and he asked "Is there any hell, is there any heaven? If there is hell and heaven, where are the gates? Where do I enter from? How can I avoid hell and choose heaven?" He was a simpl...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  6. No Image

    Woman Mystic Rengetsu pilgrimage

    Woman Mystic Rengetsu pilgrimage There are two ways a man can be. A man can either move towards having more things – then he goes against Buddha, against Tao, against Zen. The man who is too much concerned with having more is the worldly man. And the man who says whatsoever is, is good; who relaxes; who is not...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  7. No Image

    You are already a Buddha

    You are already a Buddha An old Zen story tells of a pilgrim who mounted his horse and crossed formidable mountains and swift rivers seeking a famous wise man in order to ask him how to find true enlightenment. After months of searching, the pilgrim located the teacher in a cave. The Master listened to the que...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  8. No Image

    Innocence is Divine

    Innocence is Divine Zen has no value system. Zen only brings one thing into the world: understanding, awareness. Through awareness comes innocence. And innocence is innocent of good and bad, both. Innocence is simply innocence – it knows no distinction. The last story. It is about Ryokan – the same master I wa...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  9. No Image

    Sound of one Hand Clapping

    Sound of one Hand Clapping If you have heard about Zen masters... they go on telling their disciples to go and meditate, meditate on the sound of one hand clapping. We can create a sound by clapping two hands. Zen masters say to their disciples, ”Go and find out that sound which comes out of only one hand: the...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  10. No Image

    Judging a Saint

    Judging a Saint Remember: a saint is really a saint only when he has abandoned the whip and the rope. That is the criterion. If he is still trying to pray, to meditate, to do this and that, and to discipline himself, then he is still not yet enlightened. Then he is still there and some doing continues. And doi...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  11. No Image

    Zen Master Rinzai

    Zen Master Rinzai One day the Zen monk Rinzai is speaking in a temple. He has gone into a sermon, but someone is disturbing him there. So Rinzai stops and asks, "What is the matter?" The man stands up and says, "What is soul?" Rinzai takes his staff and asks the people to give him way. The man begins to trembl...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  12. No Image

    on Memorizing the Scriptures and Real Knowledge

    Memorizing the scriptures means that you are committing theft. You are stealing the knowledge hidden in the scriptures; you did not get it by your own effort or hard work. It is all borrowed and stale, you are just holding on to the other person’s knowledge. Don’t construct your building on it. Its foundation ...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  13. No Image

    Be watchful so that inside remains always alone, far away, a watcher on the hills.

    A Zen master was passing across a river, a small river, and his disciple was asking a few questions. When they were crossing the river the disciple asked a question, saying ’Master, what is the way to cross the river?’ And the master said ’Cross it in such a way that the water does not touch your feet’. The di...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  14. No Image

    Buddha’s message

    Buddha’s message It is very significant. A Master reflects, mirrors. A Master simply gives you back again and again. A master does not improve upon you. He does not give you a should, because all shoulds create guilt. A Master does not give you any ideal, because all ideals create tension, anguish. A Master ne...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  15. No Image

    Drop all 'isms'

    Drop all 'isms' Meditate on this small parable, a real story. Ma Tsu heard of Ta Mei’s stay on the mountain, and sent a monk to ask him this question....Ma Tsu is a great Zen master, and Ta Mei is one of his disciples – he had thousands of disciples. The master sent some-body to ask the disciple some question ...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  16. No Image

    Master's Compassion

    Master's Compassion It happened once, a Zen master was celebrating his master’s birthday. The master had died. Somebody asked him, why are you celebrating? – Because as far as I know, the master denied you. He never accepted you as his disciple. You tried long, that I know. You tried again and again, that I kn...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  17. No Image

    Mind of a Sage

    Mind of a Sage One Zen monk, Bokuju, was passing through a street in a village. Somebody came and struck him with a stick. He fell down, and with him, the stick also. He got up and picked up the stick. The man who had hit him was running away. Bokuju ran after him, calling, ”Wait, take your stick with you!” He...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  18. No Image

    Mystery of Life - I chop wood and carry water.

    Question 2: Osho, Is life not sometimes far more surprising than fictions themselves? Not only sometimes but always. Fictions are only reflections of life -- how can they be more surprising? No fiction is so fictitious as life itself; life is made of the stuff called dreams. Hence the mystic says life is illus...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  19. No Image

    Respond with Awareness

    Respond with Awareness There were two temples in Japan, both antagonistic to each other. One belonged to Shinto, another belonged to Zen. And for centuries they had been quarreling, arguing against each other. Both had masters, and they both had young boys, because the masters were old and they needed somebody...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  20. No Image

    Zen Master in Jail

    Zen Master in Jail A Zen master had been put into jail several times.... Now a step further! These Zen people are really eccentric people, mad people – but they do beautiful things. A Zen master had been put into jail several times.... Now, it is one thing to forgive a thief, it is one thing not to think that ...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
  21. No Image

    Knowledge is Trouble

    Knowledge is Trouble Meditation is needed because you have become unnatural. If you live a natural life... and by ’natural’ I mean: live the moment as it is – don’t try to put any should on it, don’t try to transform it into anything else. Just accept the moment as it is. When angry, be angry and accept it; an...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN Story
    Read More
Board Pagination Prev 1 Next
/ 1