• To be responsible is to be free. To give the responsibility to somebody else is to be a prisoner.
    - Osho

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Question 1:

What is the Zen attitude towards death?

 

 

LAUGHTER. Yes, laughter is the Zen attitude towards death. And towards life too, because life and death are not separate. Whatsoever is your attitude towards life will be your attitude towards death, because death comes as the ultimate flowering of life. Life exists for death. Life exists through death.

 

Without death there will be no life at all. Death is not the end but the culmination, the crescendo.

 

Death is not the enemy, it is the friend. It makes life possible.

 

So the Zen attitude about death is exactly the same as is the Zen attitude towards life - that of laughter, joy, celebration. And if you can laugh at death, in death, you are free from all. You are freedom then. If you cannot laugh at death you will not be able to laugh in life either. Because death is always coming. Each act in life, each move in life, brings death closer. Each moment that you live.

 

You get closer to death. If you cannot laugh with death, how can you laugh with life and in life?

 

But there is a difference between the Zen Buddhists and the other religions. Other religions are not that deep. Other religions also say that there is no need to fear death, because the soul is immortal.

 

But in the very idea of the immortality of the soul, your mind is seeking eternity and nothing else. In the very idea of immortality you are denying death, you are saying there is no death. You are saying 'So why be afraid? There is no death. I am going to live - if not as THIS body, still I am going to

 

live as THIS soul. My essential being will continue. So why fear death? Death will not be destroying ME. I will remain, I.will persist, I will continue.' The other religions compromise with your desire to remain for ever. They give you a consolation. They say 'Don't be worried. You will be in some other body, in some other form, but you will continue.' This seems to be a clinging.

 

But the Zen approach towards death is utterly different, immensely profound. Other religions say death is not to be worried about, not to be feared, because the soul is eternal. Zen says: There cannot be any death, because you are not. There is nobody to die. See the difference - there is nobody to die. The self exists not, so death cannot take anything away from you. Life cannot give you anything, and death cannot take anything away. There is no purpose in life and no purpose in death. There is nobody to die. Other religions say you will not die, so don't be worried about death.

 

Zen says: You exist not - for whom are you worrying? There is nobody in life and there will be nobody in death. You are pure emptiness. Nothing has ever happened there.

 

Zen does not compromise with your desire for eternity. It does not compromise for your security, it does not compromise with your ego in any form. Zen is utterly radical, it cuts the very root. Zen says: The idea to survive for ever is idiotic. What are you going to do if you survive for ever? Are you not yet finished with your doing? Have you not yet become frustrated enough with your doing?

 

Have you not seen the foolishness and the stupidity of your being? What does it bring to you except misery? The more you are an ego, the more miserable you are. Can't you see it, that the ego functions like a wound? It hurts. Still you want to continue this wound, still you want to continue this wound for ever and ever. You don't want to be cured? Ego is illness, to be egoless is to be cured.

 

But you want to be saved for ever.

 

In your very idea of remaining for ever, being saved for ever, there is a kind of miserliness. Other religions say: Save. Save yourself. Zen says: Spend. Spend yourself. Because to ke utterly spent is to be saved.

 

A Christian was walking with Mulla Nasruddin, they had gone for a morning walk. And the Christian showed Mulla Nasruddin his church. He said, 'This is my church. Look.' And on the church there was a big board - on the board was written: Jesus Saves! Mulla Nasruddin looked at it and said 'So what! My wife saves better.'

 

Saving of any kind is a miserly attitude towards life. Spend - don't hoard. Relax your clinging. Don't keep your hands clenched like fists. Open them, be spent. Be spent like a flower which has released its fragrance to the winds. Be spent like a candle which has lived its night, danced, and now is no more. The Buddhist word for nirvana means 'putting out the candle'. When you are utterly spent, when you have authentically lived and spent yourself totally and there is nothing left in you except emptiness, you have arrived home. Because emptiness is the home.

 

You are the world. When you are not, you have come home.

 

The Zen attitude towards life is that of laughter, of living, of enjoying, of celebrating. Zen is not anti-life it is life-affirmative. It accepts all that is. It does not say deny this, deny that. It says all is good: live it, live it as totally as possible. Being total in anything is to be religious. Being partial in anything is to be worldly. And live so totally that when death comes you can live death totally too.

 

Laugh so totally that when death comes you can have your last laugh.

 

A great master, Lo-shan, was coming closer to his death. When he sensed that death was close, Lo-shan called everyone into the Buddha-hall and ascended the lecture seat. First he held his left hand open for several minutes. No one understood, so he told the monks from the eastern side of the monastery to leave. Then he held his right hand open. Still no one understood, so he told the monks from the western side of the monastery to leave. Only the laymen remained. He said to them, 'If any of you really want to show gratitude to Buddha for his compassion to you, spare no efforts in spreading the Dharma. Now, get out! Get out of here!' Then, laughing loudly, the master fell over dead.

 

Now this man, Lo-shan, is going to die. He gathers all his disciples. He opens one of his hands, nobody understands. He is saying, 'With an open hand I lived, with an open hand I am going. Totally I lived, totally I am going. I was never closed. Now death is knocking on the door, my doors are open.' Then he raised his other hand. People did not understand. Then he said to the people, 'Buddha had such immense compassion on you.'

 

What is the compassion of Buddha? The compassion of Buddha is this - that knowing perfectly well that you will not understand, he tried. That is his compassion. Knowing perfectly well that it is impossible to understand something that Buddha says, he tried his whole life to help you to understand. That is his compassion. He is trying to help you see that which you cannot see. Trying to bring into language and words that which cannot be reduced to words. Trying to do the impossible, that is his compassion.

 

Lo-shan said to the people, 'Do one thing also - spread Buddha's word, his dharma. Whatsoever he has said, go on spreading it.' Maybe somebody may understand sometime. Even if one understands in thousands, that's enough. Even if one blooms in millions, that is enough. One person flowering fills the whole earth with his fragrance. Yes, a single individual flower of consciousness transforms the whole quality of consciousness on the earth. It raises the consciousness of the whole earth.

 

And then he told them, 'Now, get out! Get out of here! ' What does he mean by 'Get out, get out of here!'? He is telling them: The mind in which you are, get out, get out of the mind. The ego in which you are, get out of the ego. But Zen masters have their own ways of expression. First he threw out half the monks from one gate, then the other half from another gate. Then only laymen remained.

 

And now he tells them, 'Get out! Get out of here!' Then, laughing loudly, the master fell over dead.

 

What is his laughter? Why is he laughing? There is a Zen parable:

 

Thus he arrived before a great castle on whose facade were carved the words 'I belong to no one and to all. Before entering you were already here. When you leave you will remain.'

 

He is laughing at the ridiculousness, absurdity. The absurdity of everything and all. Everything is so contradictory. Life exists through death, love exists through hate, compassion exists through anger. And only those who are not can be. And those who are cannot be. It is so absurd, it is so contradictory. He is having his last laughter at this whole situation of so-called life. It is not logical, that's why he is laughing. It is so illogical. What can you do with such an illogical phenomenon? You can have a good laugh.

 

Another master, Etsugen, shortly before he died, called his monks together. It was December first.

 

'I have decided to die on the eighth of this month,' he told them. 'That's the day of the Buddha's

 

enlightenment. If you have any questions left about the Teaching, you'd better ask them before then.'

 

Because the master continued with his regular duties during the next few days, some of the monks thought he was having a little fun at their expense. Most, however, were struck with grief.

 

By the evening of the seventh, nothing unusual had happened. Nonetheless, Etsugen had them all assemble and taught them for the last time about the Buddha's enlightenment. He then arranged his affairs and went into his room.

 

At dawn he took a bath, put on his ceremonial robes, and sitting erect in the lotus posture composed this death poem:

 

SHAKYAMUNI DESCENDED THE MOUNTAIN.

 

I WENT UP.

 

IN MY TEACHING, I GUESS I'VE ALWAYS BEEN SOMETHING OF A MAVERICK.

 

AND NOW I'M OFF TO HELL - YO-HO!

 

THE INQUISITIVENESS OF MEN IS PURE FOLLY.

 

Then, shutting his eyes, and still sitting, he died.

 

A Zen master can die any moment. He can decide. Why? Because he is already dead. The day he became enlightened, he died. Now only the visible form goes on living - inside, all is emptiness. He is thoroughly dead. So any day he can drop this form. It is just a soap-bubble: a small prick and it will be gone. And you cannot choose a better day to die than Buddha's enlightenment day, because that day Buddha died.

 

About Buddha there is a beautiful story. He was born on a certain day, the same day he became enlightened, and the same day he died. The birth, the enlightenment and death, all these three great things happened on the same day. This is very indicative - it says birth, enlightenment and death are all the same. It has a message: They are all alike. They are not different, their quality is the same.

 

Birth is a kind of death. When a child is born out of the womb, if the child can verbalize what is happening he will say 'I am dying.' Because he has lived for nine months in the womb in such comfort, in such luxury, in such convenience. No worry, no problem, no work. Everything is available, you need not even ask for it. He need not even breathe on his own, the mother breathes for him. He need not eat, the mother eats for him. He simply lives. It is paradise.

 

Psychologists say that the search for paradise is nothing but the memory, the nostalgia, of the womb.

 

Because you have lived in those nine months at the highest peak of comfort, luxury. And the whole search for paradise is for nothing but how to enter into that kind of warm womb again.

 

In India, the innermost part of the temple is called GARBHA, womb - very meaningfully. Where the deity of the temple sits, the innermost shrine, is called GARBHA - the womb. In ordinary life also we are searching the same comfort. When you feel a room is cozy, what do you really remember when you say that the room is cozy? Warm, alive, receptive, welcoming. You are not a stranger, you are a welcome guest. You are reminded of something of those nine months. Science goes on improving comfort, luxury, but not yet have we been able - and I think we will never be able - to create the womb situation again.

 

The child has lived in such abundance, it is just a continuous celebration. In silence, in utter silence.

 

Now he is being thrown out. And he does not know anything about the outside world, whether there is any world or not. He is thrown out of his home. If the child can say anything he will say 'I am dying.' You call it birth, you who are outside - but ask the child, just think of the child. The child will think, 'I am being uprooted, I am thrown out. I am being rejected.' The child clings, the child does not want to go out. The child feels it a kind of death. On one side it is death, on another side it is birth.

 

And so is enlightenment, again. On one side, on the side of the mind, it is death. The mind feels 'I am dying. ' The mind clings. The mind tries in every way to prevent this enlightenment happening.

 

The mind creates a thousand and one questions, doubts, inquiries, distractions. Wants to pull you back - 'Where are you going? You will die.'

 

This happens here every day. Whenever a person starts moving closer to meditation, fear arises.

 

Great fear. His whole being is at stake, he starts trembling. Actual trembling arises in his being.

 

Now he is facing the abyss - on one side it is death, on another side it will be birth. If the mind dies he will be born as consciousness. If thought dies he will be born as samadhi, as no-thought. If the mind disappears he will be born as no-mind. If this noise of the mind disappears then he will be born as silence. On one side it will be death, another side birth.

 

And so is death. Each death is also a birth, and each birth is also a death.

 

This story of Buddha's being born on a certain day at a certain time, then at the same time and the same day becoming enlightened, at the same time and the same day dying, is meaningful. It simply says that all these three things are the same. One thing is missing, I would like to add that too. If you REALLY fall in love then the whole list is complete. All these four things, then your whole life is complete. If I am to write Buddha's story again, I will add this too, that he fell in love on the same day at the same time. Because that too is a birth and a death. The people who were writing Buddha's story were not so courageous. They have dropped the idea of love, that seems to be dangerous.

 

These are the four greatest things in life, the four directions of life. This is the whole sky of life.

 

Etsugen decided to die on Buddha's enlightenment day. Many Zen monks have been deciding to die on that day. And they die on that day. And they don't commit suicide and they don't take any poison - they just collapse. But their collapse is beautiful. They collapse with a smile, with laughter.

 

And this is a tradition in Zen, that before a master dies he has to compose a death poem. That too is very significant. Death should be received with poetry, with joy. That is your last statement, your testament. It should be in poetry. It should be poetry - prose won't do, prose will look a little too

 

worldly. Something more, something of a song. Etsugen wrote this poem. 'Shakyamuni' is the name of Buddha.

 

SHAKYAMUNI DESCENDED THE MOUNTAIN.

 

I WENT UP.

 

He is saying 'I have been just the opposite of Buddha.' Only a Zen master can say that. Otherwise, followers are followers - they are imitators, they are carbon-copies. But real followers are not, they are authentic beings. They live their life. They live with great respect for the master, with IMMENSE respect for the master, but they live their life. In fact, that immense respect for the master will make you capable to live your own life.

 

Buddha lived his own life. If you are really respectful towards him you will live your own life, that's how you will pay your homage.

 

SHAKYAMUNI DESCENDED THE MOUNTAIN.

 

I WENT UP.

 

IN MY TEACHING, I GUESS I'VE ALWAYS BEEN SOMETHING OF A MAVERICK.

 

AND NOW I'M OFF TO HELL - YO-HO!

 

THE INQUISITIVENESS OF MEN IS PURE FOLLY.

 

He is saying 'Now I am off to hell.' He is joking. Only a Zen master can joke at the last moment. Only a Zen master can have the guts to say 'Now I am off to hell.' In fact, Zen people say that wherever a master is, there is heaven. If he is in hell, hell will be heaven. Heaven is his climate, he carries it with himself.

 

'Then, shutting his eyes, and still sitting, he died.' So silently, so poetically, so radically.

 

And the third story.

 

When the master, Tenno, was dying, he called to his room the monk in charge of food and clothing in the temple. When the monk sat down by the bed, Tenno asked, 'Do you understand?'

 

Now, he has not said anything and he asks, 'Do you understand?'

 

'No,' the monk was puzzled and said.

 

Tenno laughed, and said, 'Do you understand?'

 

The monk said, 'No.' And was more puzzled.

 

Then Tenno, picking up his pillow, hurled it through the window, and said, 'Do you understand?'

 

And the monk said, 'No. And you are making me more and more confused.'

 

Then he said, 'Okay, then I will do the real thing.' He closed his eyes, gave a lion's roar, and died.

 

He was dying. This disciple was not yet insightful. He was dying - if you have loved your master, if you have really loved your master, you will know what is happening to him. That's why he asked 'Do you understand?' He is asking 'Have you not come to know that I am dying? Has it not reached to your heart yet that I am dying?' At the last moment he is testing his disciple. Even death is being used as a kind of teaching. Even death is being used as the last effort to awaken the disciple. Then he laughed, and asked 'Do you understand?' The laughter was so total, if the disciple had looked into the eyes of the master and heard the laughter, there was the whole teaching of Buddha in it, all the scriptures in it. The totality of it. And he would have seen that the master is leaving the body.

 

But he must have got into thinking. The master asked 'Do you understand?' And he has not said anything - what does he mean by 'Do you understand?' The disciple must have gone into his mind.

 

Because he had gone into his mind, the master laughed to bring him out of his mind. Because nothing brings you out of your mind like laughter.

 

Somebody has asked 'Why, Osho, do you go on telling jokes?' That's why. Nothing brings you out of your mind like laughter. When you have a good laugh the logic disappears - at that moment, at least. And the jokes are so absurd. They are jokes because they are absurd; you laugh because they are ridiculous, you laugh because they don't follow the rules of logic, they go just against it.

 

They take such an unexpected turn that your thinking could not have concluded. Because of that unexpected turn, because of that sudden leap...the whole joke goes in one way, then comes the punchline. And the punchline is a leap, it is discontinuous.

 

A joke is a great meditation.

 

The master laughed. Loud was his laughter, total was his laughter. He wanted to bring this disciple out of his mind - he had gone too much into thinking. He was thinking 'Why has he asked "Do you understand?" What does he mean?' He has asked a simple question - a question to provoke the disciple to be alert of the master's situation, what is happening to him. If the disciple was really in tune with the master, that would have been a shock: 'Do you understand?' And he would have opened his eyes and he would have looked into the being of the master and would have felt that the master is ready to leave the body. But he went into thinking and missed the point. Hence the master tried again by laughing. And asked 'Do you understand?' Still the disciple was more puzzled, because he could not see why the master is laughing. He started thinking 'Why?'

 

The moment you bring the question 'Why?' you are moving into the rut, the dead rut, of the mind.

 

Once you have asked why, you miss the meditative moment. Seeing that the disciple is very gross, he had to be gross. He had to throw his pillow out of the window - he had to do something absolutely meaningless, just to shock. But the disciple was more puzzled, even more puzzled.

 

Then he gave a lion's roar. And died. It is said that for many centuries the roar was heard in his monastery. Whenever people would sit silently and meditate they would hear the lion's roar. This

 

was his last shock. And then he died. Why did he do this, this lion's roar? Maybe nothing is bringing him out of his mind - this utterly absurd thing, a lion's roar for no reason at all, may bring him out of the mind. And then he died. If nothing else brings him out of his mind, then death will bring him.

 

And if even for a single moment you can taste the space called no-mind, then you know that there is nobody to die.

 

Nobody lives, nobody dies. Nothingness lives, nothingness dies. You are not. Have a good laugh at this situation. You are not and you exist. You are not and you are. This is the cosmic joke.

 

You ask me, WHAT IS THE ZEN ATTITUDE TOWARDS DEATH?

 

Laughter. But that is their attitude towards life too.

 

- Osho, "This Very Body the Buddha, #8, Q1"


 

 

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    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...
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    on Zen Master Ekido

    Osho on Zen Master Ekido The Japanese Master Ekido was a severe teacher and his pupils feared him. One day, as one of his pupils was striking the time of day on the temple gong, he missed a beat because he was watching a beautiful girl who was passing the gates. Unknown to the pupil, Ekido was standing behind ...
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    on Gautam Buddha, Maulingaputta and Mahakashyapa

    In the long history of Zen there are milestones. Mahakashyapa is the first, but not much is known about him – in Buddhist scriptures he is mentioned only once. Just one mention and yet he is regarded as the greatest disciple of Gautam Buddha. For twenty years he has not spoken a single word, no question, just ...
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    'I don't know' is the beginning of zazen.

    LONG AGO, IN JAPAN, A BLIND MAN VISITING A FRIEND ONE NIGHT, WAS OFFERED A PAPER-AND-BAMBOO LANTERN TO CARRY HOME WITH HIM. 'I DO NOT NEED A LANTERN,' HE SAID, 'DARKNESS OR LIGHT IS ALL THE SAME TO ME.' 'I KNOW YOU DO NOT NEED A LANTERN TO FIND YOUR WAY, HIS FRIEND REPLIED, 'BUT YOU MUST TAKE IT BECAUSE IF YOU...
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    Osho on Zen

    Osho on Zen Osho, I cannot understand the philosophy of Zen. What should I do to understand it? Zen is not a philosophy at all. To approach Zen as if it is a philosophy is to begin in a wrong way from the very beginning. A philosophy is something of the mind; Zen is totally beyond the mind. Zen is the process ...
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    on Zen – Zen is not a philosophy, it is not a doctrine. It is an experience, an experience of your own interiority

    Question 1 Osho, What is Zen? Sagar, IT IS ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE TO ANSWER because Zen is not a philosophy, it is not a doctrine. It is an experience, an experience of your own interiority, of your own subjectivity – not an objective experience. If it were some object outside you, there would be a possibility of d...
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    What is the Zen attitude towards death?

    Question 1: What is the Zen attitude towards death? LAUGHTER. Yes, laughter is the Zen attitude towards death. And towards life too, because life and death are not separate. Whatsoever is your attitude towards life will be your attitude towards death, because death comes as the ultimate flowering of life. Life...
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    Osho - Zen Master Kyogen Enlightenment

    Osho on Zen Master Kyogen Enlightenment Kyogen was a scholar of great learning, and for some time, this stood in the way of his enlightenment. One day, isan asked kyogen, "when you were with our teacher, hyakujo, you were clever enough to give ten answers to a single question, and hundreds of answers to ten qu...
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    Patanjali is for unhealthy people and Zen is for very natural people

    Question 5: For zen it is: “eat when you are hungry and drink when you are thirsty.” For Patanjali it is: “regularity - niyam.” How to reconcile spontaneity and regularity? There is no need to synthesize. If you are really spontaneous you will become regular. If you are really regular you will become spontaneo...
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    on Bokoju Enlightenment

    And a Zen Master is just the opposite: you go to him, you have to bow down seven times. And you ask some innocent question… and he jumps on you, hits you on the head so unexpectedly. A very different device, but just think: a Bodhidharma, a Rinzai, a Bokoju, jumping on you, hitting on your head! For a moment a...
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    Hanyatara and Bodhidharma

    I have heard a very beautiful legend. The legend is, there was a great Master in India, the twenty-seventh successor of Gautam the Buddha; his name was Hanyatara. A king in south India requested him to come to his court. The king himself came, bowed down to Hanyatara, touched his feet, and said, "Please, come ...
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    Bodhidharma : When Bodhidharma reached China

    Osho on Bodhidharma I have a very soft corner in my heart for Bodhidharma. That makes it a very special occasion to speak about him. Perhaps he is the only man whom I have loved so deeply that speaking on him I will be almost speaking on myself. That also creates a great complexity, because he never wrote anyt...
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    Drop Christianity, Drop Islam, Drop Buddhism

    Everything that we go on doing on the surface will be just like changing a name. Inside you will remain the same. Your persona can never become more than skin deep — your know ledge, your identity in the world is nothing but a persona, a dressing. Zen says you are wasting your life. Go deep, go beyond your kno...
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    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...
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    Are the Upanishads and Zen the same?

    Question : Osho, Are the Upanishads and Zen the same? They are not. The upanishad is a happening between the master and the disciple, Zen is the happening in the disciple himself. The master may help him, may create devices, show the path – but Zen is basically an individual experience. It is not like love. It...
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    A man of Zen is totally different from the man of Yoga 

    A man of Zen is totally different from the man of Yoga, and the distinction has to be understood. The man of Yoga is in tremendous control. The whole methodology of Yoga is how to control yourself, how to control absolutely. The man of Yoga cannot be disturbed because he is in such utter control. The man of Ze...
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    Zen is not a teaching but a device

    Zen is not a teaching but a device Zen has no teaching, Zen has no doctrine. Zen gives no guidance, because it says there is no goal. It says you are not to move into a certain direction. It says you are already there, so the more you try to reach there, the less is the possibility of reaching. The more you se...
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    How does the Man of Zen take his Tea?

    Question 1 : Beloved Osho, How does the Man of Zen take his Tea? For the man of Zen everything is sacred -- even taking a cup of tea. Whatever he does, he does as if he is in a holy space. There is a story about Moses. When he went on Mount Sinai to meet God and to receive the Ten Commandments, he saw a miracl...
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    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...
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    Go on Digging

    ON ONE OCCASION, JOSHU SAID TO HIS MONKS: I HAVE SINGLE-HEARTEDLY PRACTICED ZAZEN IN THE SOUTHERN PROVINCE FOR THIRTY YEARS. IF YOU WANT TO REALIZE ENLIGHTENMENT, YOU SHOULD REALIZE THE ESSENCE OF BUDDHISM, DOING ZAZEN. IN THE COURSE OF THREE, FIVE, TWENTY OR THIRTY YEARS, IF YOU FAIL TO GRASP THE WAY, YOU MAY...
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    If after grappling with a koan for three or five years, there is still no satori, then the koan should be dropped

    BUKKO SAID: AT THE BEGINNING YOU HAVE TO TAKE UP A KOAN. THE KOAN IS SOME DEEP SAYING OF A PATRIARCH. ITS EFFECT IN THIS WORLD OF DISTINCTIONS IS TO MAKE A MAN'S GAZE STRAIGHT, AND TO GIVE HIM STRENGTH AS HE STANDS ON THE BRINK OF THE RIVER BANK. FOR THE PAST TWO OR THREE YEARS, I HAVE BEEN GIVING, IN MY INTER...
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    on Zen swordsmanship as an Meditation method - Eastern meditation and Western reason are in a deep synthesis in Japan.

    In Zen, and only in Zen, something of great import has happened. That is, they don’t make any distinction between ordinary life and religious life; rather, they have bridged them both. And they have used very ordinary skills as UPAYA, as methods for meditation. That is something of tremendous import. Because i...
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    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 ...
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    on Ten Bulls of Zen

    Osho on Ten Bulls of Zen Ten Bulls of Zen. That is one of the most beautiful stories man has ever created. It is a collection of ten paintings.... In the first painting, the bull is lost, the owner is looking here and there, and there are trees all around, but there is no sign of the bull. In the second pictur...
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    Be a fool in the Taoist sense, in the Zen sense

    Ordinarily we think people who know answers are wise. They may be learned but they are not wise. They may be very well informed, but information has nothing to do with wisdom. People who are really wise, in fact, have no answers. They have a quest, an enquiry, a tremendous enquiry in them, but no answers. By a...
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    on Bodhidharma

    Osho on Zen Master Bodhidharma I have a very soft corner in my heart for Bodhidharma. That makes it a very special occasion to speak about him. Perhaps he is the only man whom I have loved so deeply that speaking on him I will be almost speaking on myself. That also creates a great complexity, because he never...
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    Zen : Osho Quotes on ZEN

    Osho Quotes on ZEN Zen says: Buddhahood is not somewhere far away. You are just sitting on top of it. You are it! So there is no need to go anywhere; you just have to become a little alert about who you are. It has already happened! Nothing has to be achieved, nothing has to be practiced! Only one thing: you h...
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    The fundamentals of Zen

    First a few fundamentals.... Zen is not a theology, it is a religion -- and religion without a theology is a unique phenomenon. All other religions exist around the concept of God. They have theologies. They are God-centric not man-centric; man is not the end, God is the end. But not so for Zen. For Zen, man i...
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    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...
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    I cannot understand the philosophy of Zen. What should I do to understand it?

    Question 1: Osho, I cannot understand the philosophy of Zen. What should I do to understand it? Baula, Zen is not a philosophy at all. To approach Zen as if it were a philosophy is to start in a wrong way from the very beginning. A philosophy is something of the mind; Zen is totally beyond the mind. Zen is the...
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    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...
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    Patanjali is for unhealthy people and Zen is for very natural people

    Question 5 : For zen it is: “eat when you are hungry and drink when you are thirsty.” For Patanjali it is: “regularity - niyam.” How to reconcile spontaneity and regularity? There is no need to synthesize. If you are really spontaneous you will become regular. If you are really regular you will become spontane...
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    on Mahakashyap - first Zen Master

    This story is one of the most significant ones, because from this was passed the tradition of Zen. Buddha was the source, and Mahakashyap was the first, the original master of Zen. Buddha was the source, Mahakashyap was the first master, and this story is the source from where the whole tradition — one of the ...
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    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...
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    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...
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    on Rinzai Enlightenment

    A Zen monk, Rinzai, attained his enlightenment, and the first thing he asked was, ”Where is my body? Where has my body gone?” And he began to search. He called his disciples and said, ”Go and find out where my body is. I have lost my body.” He had entered the formless. You are also a formless existence, but yo...
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    Now Zen has become very fashionable in the West

    Question 2 Osho, In lecture yesterday you spoke about the Master’s work: keeping his disciples from settling for less than “freedom from the self”. In the West, much is made of the experience that “This is it,” that nothing can be different than it is – right now! Is this a copper mind experience? How can ther...
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    Zen is rejoicing in purposelessness.

    Zen is rejoicing in purposelessness. Question 1 On commenting on ten zen bulls, nyogen senzaki and paul reps write in the book, `zen flesh, zen bones,' "may the reader, like the chinese patriarch, discover the footprints of his potential self, and carrying the staff of his purpose and the wine jug of his true ...
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    Remain alert while moving with people, while moving in the world

    Man ordinarily lives in these three states, sometimes waking, sometimes dreaming, sometimes fast asleep; this is the wheel man moves in. And because of these three states of mind many things have arisen into human consciousness and in human culture, civilization. The first kind of consciousness, waking, create...
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    on Zen Master Bankei

    Question : Osho, Bankei was preaching quietly to his followers one day when his talking was interrupted by a priest from another sect. this sect believed in the power of miracles, and thought that salvation came from repeating holy words. Bankei stopped talking, and asked the priest what he wanted to say. The ...
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    on Zen and Politics – Is Zen against Politics?

    Question 3 : Is Zen against Politics? Zen is so much against politics that it never talks about it. It is so much against politics that it cannot even be against it. If you are against it, it will affect you. Then somehow you will remain in some way related to it. To be against is to be related. When you are v...
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    The Zen Manifesto

    TANKA ASKED CHORO, "WHAT IS THE SELF BEFORE THE EMPTY EON?" AS CHORO WAS ABOUT TO ANSWER, TANKA SAID, "YOU'RE STILL NOISY - GO AWAY FOR NOW." ONE DAY, AS CHORO WAS CLIMBING BOL PEAK, HIS MIND OPENED UP INTO ENLIGHTENMENT. HE TOOK A SHORTCUT DOWN AND WENT BACK TO STAND BY TANKA, WHO SLAPPED HIM AND SAID, "I THO...
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    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...
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    on Zen Master Bokoju Death

    Meditation means surrender, total letting go. As soon as someone surrenders himself he finds himself in the hands of divinity. If we cling to ourselves we cannot be one with the almighty. When the waves disappear, they become the ocean itself. Let us try some experiments in order to understand what is meant by...
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    on Kakuan Ten Bulls of Zen Paintings

    Osho on Kakuan Ten Bulls of Zen Paintings We enter on a rare pilgrimage. The Ten Bulls of Zen are something unique in the history of human consciousness. Truth has been expressed in many ways, and it has always been found that it remains unexpressed whatsoever you do. Howsoever you express it, it eludes, it is...
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    Mind is the barrier. No-mind is the door

    Truth is all around, but your interpretations are YOUR interpretations. God is speaking all the time, but you hear not, or even if you hear, you hear something else. You hear according to you, your mind comes in, and hence you go on missing. Unless the mind is dropped you will not be able to know what truth is...
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    on Ten Zen Bulls

    In Japan, they had a beautiful collection of paintings called “Ten Zen Bulls.” It is a series of paintings depicting the whole story of the search. In the first, a man is looking here and there… his bull is lost. You see forest all around, ancient trees, and the puzzled man standing there looking, and he canno...
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    Immediacy, that is the whole insistence of Zen.

    Zen people say that when you know, you have to say, knowing well that it cannot be said. You have to sing it. Zen Masters have been very creative. Either they were singers, dancers, or painters, or in some sort of art, calligraphy, pottery. Whatsoever they could do they did. That became the gesture of their ex...
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    If you cannot die as a sage, then at least die as a warrior.

    The word warrior has lost its old meaning. Now there are no warriors; there are people who will come like a thief on the plane and drop bombs and escape. These cowards are not warriors. Scientific technology has destroyed in man so much that it is almost incalculable: for example, the warrior has disappeared; ...
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    Zen is the process of going above the mind

    To understand Zen you need not make a philosophical effort; you have to go deep into meditation. And what is meditation all about? Meditation is a jump from the mind into no-mind, from thoughts to no-thought. Mind means thinking, no-mind means pure awareness. One simply is aware. Only then will you be able to ...
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    Sufism is nothing but pure prayer, Zen is nothing but meditation.

    Truth is one - cannot be otherwise because existence is a universe, it is not a 'multiverse'. It is one. It is glued together. It is a togetherness. It is a cosmos. That which keeps the universe together is what we call truth, or Tao, or God. Tao is not a person, neither is god a person, but the unity that run...
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    These koans are for meditation

    Zen Koans are for meditation to help you to go beyond mind Someone has asked a very beautiful question. Really, the question is a Zen koan. First it will be useful to understand what a Zen koan is. Only then can this question be discussed. Zen has a special method of meditation. They call it 'koan' or 'ko-an'....
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    only in Zen is his devotion towards a living master.

    Question 1 Beloved Osho, With the path of Sufism, the way of the heart behind us, where does the devotee fit in? Maneesha, the devotee fits in everywhere. Of course the context becomes different. In Sufism, the devotee is devoted to God to such an extent that al-Hillaj Mansoor started shouting, “I am God!” The...
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    on Enlightenment of Shen Tsan's Teacher

    on Enlightenment of Shen Tsan's Teacher Zen Master, Shen Tsan, gained his enlightenment through Pai Chang. He then returned to the monastery in which he had been ordained by his ’first teacher’, the monk who had brought him up from childhood and who, at that time, was a very old man.... Remember: he was just a...
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    on Shunryo Suzuki

    Question 1 : Beloved Osho, Shunryo Suzuki, one of the first zen masters to live and teach in the west, was once asked why he never spoke much about satori, enlightenment. The master laughed and answered, “the reason i do not talk about satori is because i have never had it.” Could you please comment. David Hey...
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    Sit silently doing nothing, and let things happen

    Question 6: Beloved Osho, I am sitting silently doing nothing, and the weeds are growing all around me. Roderick, weeds are divine. Don't call them weeds. They are as spiritual as the buddhas. They partake of God as much as roses. Remove men from the earth -- will there be any difference between weeds and rose...
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    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...
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    You can be enlightened in a single minute; you can wait for forty years. It depends how gross you are

    Question : 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 can wait for lives; i...
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    on Zen Master Ikkyu and Zen Tea Ceremony

    Question 2: Beloved Osho, I love this little zen story, as it also has the flavor of your childhood stories. Ikkyu, the zen master, was very clever even as a boy. His teacher had a precious teacup, a rare antique. Ikkyu happened to break this cup and was greatly perplexed. Hearing the footsteps of his teacher,...
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    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...
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    For Zen, meditation has to be a twenty-four-hour affair

    Perhaps there is no other religion that has made your whole life, twenty-four hours a day, a meditative experience. Zen does not believe in meditating one hour in the morning, or one hour in the night. It does not make meditation a separate, particular act. It wants meditation to become a quality of your being...
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    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 ...
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    Zen people have always liked the bamboo. The bamboo is their symbol

    Zen people have always liked the bamboo. The bamboo is their symbol. And the reason? It is green all the year. In every season it is green — come rain, come summer, come winter, it is green. Nothing changes it. It lives a kind of eternity. Its greenness means its freshness, its youth, its radiance, its alivene...
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    Zen is not anti-life it is life-affirmative. It accepts all that is

    The Zen attitude towards life is that of laughter, of living, of enjoying, of celebrating. Zen is not anti-life it is life-affirmative. It accepts all that is. It does not say deny this, deny that. It says all is good: live it, live it as totally as possible. Being total in anything is to be religious. Being p...
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    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...
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    On the path of Zen the first thing to be aware of is knowledge

    KNOWLEDGE IS not enough, to rely on it is dangerous. Knowledge is borrowed, it is not knowing. Knowing grows with you, knowing is a growth, an evolution, knowledge is implanted within you from me outside, knowledge is borrowed, it is counterfeit. It looks like knowing, it is not. It deceives, it gives you a fe...
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    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...
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    The moment you go one step in, you are the Allah

    Question 1: Osho, I love the expression, "take one step towards allah, and he will come running a thousand steps towards you." It seems to suggest that receptivity is not a totally inactive waiting but requires a certain participation. Even to receive a flower, doesn't one need to hold out one's hand? or am i ...
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    What is zazen? : Just because of Zazen, Monasteries came into existence

    The word 'zazen' has to be understood before I can start discussing the sutras that you have brought. Zen I have explained to you. It comes from the Sanskrit dhyan. Buddha never used Sanskrit as a part of his revolution. Sanskrit was the language of the learned, it has never been a language of the masses. Budd...
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    Zen is a very creative experience; it is not like other religions

    Zen is a very creative experience; it is not like other religions Question 2 I cannot put it into words how much i am always touched by the beauty of your expressions -- in your words, your gestures and now especially in your paintings. What exactly happens, when you are sitting in front of an empty paper? Is ...
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    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 ...
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    on Zen Garden – My people have to learn to live like a Zen garden

    I am taking away from you all that can create boredom in you. My whole effort is to give you again a natural life — wild, adventurous, dangerous; then boredom cannot exist. The new man will live dangerously. He will live like wild animals, not like tamed animals in a zoo. He will live like trees in a forest, n...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN
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    This is perfect Zen.

    Question The zen masters say, "kill your parents, " and even, "if you meet the buddha on the way, kill him immediately." is it not shocking? is it not irreverent? It is shocking, but precisely, that is the purpose. A Master has to shock you to awake you. A Master is not a lullaby. A Master is not a tranquilize...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN
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    on Zen Laughter Meditation and Zen Vision

    on Zen Laughter Meditation and Zen Vision Question 3 In regards to the Zen monks who laugh as a meditation every morning -- Don't you think they are taking their Laughter a Little too Seriously? No, because they laugh again -- a second laugh -- for the first, that "How foolish we are! Why are we laughing?" If ...
    CategoryOsho on ZEN
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    on Hui Neng Enlightenment

    It is said that Hui Neng, one of the greatest Zen masters, the sixth patriarch in the Zen tradition, became enlightened by hearing four lines of The Diamond Sutra. And he was just passing by in a marketplace. He had gone to purchase something, he was not even thinking of enlightenment, and somebody by the side...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
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