| |
|||
| Om. |
|||
|
|
|||
| What
is Meditation?
|
|||
|
A
long time ago, Siddhartha went from place to place going through different
processes, meeting different teachers who were performing different
penances. Some were meditating, some were performing rituals, some
were even hanging from the trees, some were standing with their hands
always up, never sitting at all.
When Siddhartha sat
down under the bodhi tree he got up as Buddha. Ananda was the first
man to ask the master what he had got there. The reply was, “Nothing.”
We do not know how to describe what he found under the bodhi tree.
He spent the rest of his life, from 30 to 80, trying to describe what
he had got and still he could not. This is something that still remains
un-described, un-conceived.
When you know that
you are meditating it is not meditation. The thought that, "I
am meditating and this is the process." is not meditation. Sitting
in a particular posture is not meditation. Concentrating on different
centers in the sushpana channel of the spine is not meditation.
Chanting a formula is not meditation. Having a vision or picture of
a particular deity is not meditation. So what is meditation?
The important question
is if the meditation is immaculate, untouched, without cause and without
effect? To know what meditation is, you have to find who the meditator
is: "Who is the meditator?" When you ask this everything
will drop. The process will to drop because you are inquiring into
the nature of the meditator, the one who is busy with this process
of sadhana, who is executing the practice of meditation - the same
one who executes anything that is possible through the mind. If you
ask who the meditator is I don't think you will easily get the answer
because everything will drop right here. You have to find out who
the meditator is, who is meditating, and what is the purpose of meditation.
You forgot the purpose
of meditation. We wanted freedom from this world process of suffering
and to end this we meditate with the help of the mind. The mind itself
is suffering, is samsara; so if we take the help of mind we are not
going to arrive anywhere. Ask who the meditator is and you will reply
to yourself: "I meditate. I am the meditator."
What is this ‘I’
who becomes the meditator? How is it different from what it is searching
for? You will have to discover what has been concealed when you give
rise to this meditator - what is buried underneath. What is that foundation
out of which this meditator rises and performs different sadhanas
and practices? Return back home to find the source of the meditator - the source
of ‘I’. There is no difference between the meditator, the ‘I’, the
mind, and the ego. Whenever we meditate it is the ego that takes the
role of the meditator, so meditation has not brought any result so
far.
Someone arose from
under the bodhi tree. That cannot be attributed to any practice of
meditation. When he was asked what he had attained he was quite honest
and said, "Nothing." He had not attained anything during
the process of long sittings of meditation. Something had revealed
itself to itself. That revelation, that happening, is not in your
hands. If you carry a gun on your shoulder and you are looking for
a target it will take you elsewhere. The gun is effort, the gun is
ego. If you drop the gun and don't possess anything it is going to
reveal itself, by itself, to itself within itself. That which has
been concealed since millions of years will have to reveal itself.
We are waiting, thinking
that we have to do something about it. It is this doer-ship which
is concealing the truth, existence, consciousness, and bliss. Otherwise
this has always been with you, is with you now, and will always be
with you. You can never separate yourself from it at any time. You
cannot breathe without it, you cannot live without it. It was only
a concept that the wave was different from the ocean, that the ring
was different from the gold, or that the vessel is different from
the clay. Because we do not see the substratum we find a difference.
Here and now, if
we do not make any effort, if we do not activate a single thought,
if we do not even allow the thought ‘I’, if we do not hold to the
concept of time, if we do not postpone anything to the next moment,
to the next breath, this is going to reveal itself. Here and now means
out of time all together. This has nothing to do with any meditation
or any process. We have tried endlessly through numberless incarnations
and we have not been able to complete it. This time let us decide
to return home. We have been different waves, different name and form;
but if name and form does not arise where is the wave? We are the
ocean, existence, consciousness and bliss. We have come here to realize
this without any effort. We have tried every kind of effort, we have
been advised in our different backgrounds to “do this” or “do that.”
Now, here, for the first time you do not have to do anything. Simply
sit quiet for one moment in time. That is all that is required to
realize existence, consciousness and bliss.
How could existence
be absent? Is it possible for you ever to deny that you exist or even
that you are conscious of your existence? You can only deny that you
are happy because no one is happy, from the king down to the worker.
We have been missing bliss because we have been searching for it in
things which are not permanent, which are not eternal, which appear
and disappear.
Only bliss is missing.
Existence can be found in rocks, in animals, in trees. We are human
beings, a super species among 8.4 million species. This is the supreme
form, the most blessed form, in which it is possible to know that
we are That. Do not postpone the right use of a human form until the
next life or the next day. Tomorrow will never come. This is not difficult,
not located miles away from you. It is here, now, nearer than your
own breath. It is behind the retina. It is that which shines through
the eyes. It is that which even sunshine cannot reach, nor the moon,
nor the stars, nor fire. You are That.
Om Hare Om.
15 May, 1992
|