From Sex to Superconsciousness
Chapter 1. Sex - The Genesis of Love
Question 1: What is love?
To feel it is easy, to define
love is difficult indeed. If you ask a fish what the sea is like, the fish will
say, "This is the sea. The sea is all around. And that's that." But
if you insist - "Please define the sea" - then the problem becomes very
difficult indeed.
The finest and the most
beautiful things in life can be lived, can be known, but they are difficult to
define, difficult to describe.
Man's misery is this: for the
last four to five thousand years he has simply talked and talked about
something he should have been living earnestly, about something that must be
realized from within - about love. There have been great talks on love,
countless love songs have been sung, and devotional hymns are continuously
being chanted in the temples and in the churches - what all isn't done in the
name of love? - still there is no place for love in man's life. If we delve
deeply into mankind's languages, we will not find a more untrue word than
"love".
All the religions carry on
about love, but the kind of love that is found everywhere, the kind of love
that has enveloped man like some hereditary misfortune has only succeeded in
closing all the gates to love in man's life. But the masses worship the leaders
of the religions as the creators of love. They have falsified love; they have
blocked all love's streams. In this case there is no basic difference between
East and West, between India and America.
The stream of love has not
yet surfaced in man. And we attribute this to man himself. We say it is because
man is spoiled that love has not evolved, that there is no current of love in
our lives. We blame it on the mind; we say the mind is poisonous. The mind is
not poison. Those who degrade the mind have poisoned love; they have not
allowed the growth of love. Nothing in this world is poison.
Nothing is bad in God's whole
creation; everything is nectar. It is man alone who has transformed this full
cup of nectar into poison. And the major culprits are the so-called teachers,
the so-called holy men and saints, the politicians.
Reflect upon this in detail.
If this sickness is not understood immediately, if it is not straightened out
right away, there is no possibility - now or in the future - of love in man's
life.
The ironical thing is that we
have blindly accepted the reasons for this from the very same sources that are
to blame for love's not dawning on the human horizon in the first place. If
misleading principles are repeated and reiterated down the centuries we fail to
see the basic fallacies behind the original principles. And then chaos is
created, because man is intrinsically incapable of becoming what these
unnatural rules say he should become. We simply accept that man is wrong.
In ancient times, I have
heard, a hawker of hand-fans used to pass by the palace of the king every day.
He used to brag about the unique and wonderful fans he sold. No one, he
claimed, had ever seen such fans before.
The king had a collection of
all sorts of fans from every corner of the world and so he was curious.
He leaned over his balcony
one day to have a look at this seller of unique and wonderful fans. To him the
fans looked ordinary, hardly worth a penny, but he called the man upstairs
anyway. The king asked, "What is the uniqueness of those fans? And what is
their price?"
The hawker replied,
"Your Majesty, they don't cost much. Considering the quality of these
fans, the price is very low: one hundred rupees a fan."
The king was amazed.
"One hundred rupees! This paisa-fan, this penny-fan, is available anywhere
in the market. And you ask a hundred rupees! What is so special about these
fans?"
The man said, "The
quality! Each fan is guaranteed to last one hundred years. Even in one hundred
years, it won't spoil."
"From the look of it, it
seems impossible it can even last a week. Are you trying to cheat me? Is this
outright fraud? And with the king, too?"
The vendor answered, "My
Lord, would I dare? You know very well, sir, that I walk under your balcony
daily, selling my fans. The price is one hundred rupees a fan, and I am
responsible if it doesn't last one hundred years. Every day I am available in
the street. And, above all, you are the ruler of this land. How can I be safe
if I cheat you?"
The fan was purchased at the
asking price. Although the king did not trust the hawker, he was dying of
curiosity to know what grounds the man had for making such a statement. The
vendor was ordered to present himself again on the seventh day.
The central stick came out in
three days, and the fan disintegrated before the week was out.
The king was sure the seller
of fans would never turn up again, but to his complete surprise the man
presented himself as he had been asked to - on time, on the seventh day.
"At your service, Your
Majesty."
The king was furious.
"You rascal! You fool! Look. There lies your fan, all broken into pieces.
This is its condition in a week, and you guaranteed it would last a hundred
years! Are you mad, or just a supercheat?"
The man replied humbly,
"With due respect, it seems My Lord does not know how to use fans. The fan
must last for one hundred years; it is guaranteed. How did you fan?"
The king said, "My
goodness. Now I will have to learn how to fan too!"
"Please don't be angry.
How did the fan come to this fate in just seven days? How did you fan?"
The king lifted the fan,
showing the manner in which one fans.
The man said, "Now I
understand. You shouldn't fan like that."
"What other way is
there?" the king asked.
The man explained, "Hold
the fan steady. Keep it steady in front of you and then move your head to and
fro. The fan will last one hundred years. You will pass away but the fan will
remain intact.
Nothing is wrong with the
fan; the way you fan is wrong. You keep the fan steady and move your head.
Where is my fan at fault? The fault is yours, not that of my fan."
Mankind is accused of a
similar fault. Look at humanity. Man is so sick, sick from the accumulated
illness of five, six, ten thousand years. It is repeatedly said that it is man
who is wrong, not the culture. Man is rotting, yet the culture is praised. Our
great culture! Our great religion! Everything is great! And see the fruits of
it!
They say, "Man is wrong;
man should change himself," yet no one stands up to question whether
things aren't like they are because our culture and religion, unable to fill
man with love after ten thousand years, are based on false values. And if love
hasn't evolved in the last ten thousand years, take it from me there is no
future possibility, based on this culture and religion, of ever seeing a loving
man. Something which could not be achieved in the last ten thousand years
cannot be attained in the next ten thousand years. Today's man will be the same
tomorrow. Although the outer wrappings of etiquette, civilization and
technology change from time to time, man is the same and will be the same
forever.
We are not prepared to review
our culture and religion, yet we sing their praises at the top of our lungs,
and kiss the feet of their saints and custodians. We won't even agree to look
back, to reflect upon our ways and upon the direction of our thinking, to check
if they are not misleading, to see if they are not all wrong.
I wish to say that the base
is defective, that the values are false. The proof is today's man. What other
proof can there be?
If we plant a seed and the
fruit is poisonous and bitter, what does it prove? It proves that the seed must
have been poisonous and bitter. But it is difficult, of course, to foretell
whether a particular seed will give bitter fruit or not. You may look it over
carefully, press it or break it open, but you cannot predict for sure whether
the fruit will be sweet or not. You have to await the test of time.
Sow a seed. A plant will
sprout. Years will pass. A tree will emerge, will spread its branches to the
sky, will bear fruit - and only then will you come to know whether the seed
that was sown was bitter or not. Modern man is the fruit of those seeds of
culture and religion that were sown ten thousand years ago and have been
nurtured ever since. And the fruit is bitter; it is full of conflict and
misery.
But we are the very people
who eulogize those seeds and expect love to flower from them. It is not to be,
I repeat, because any possibility for the birth of love has been killed by
religion. The possibility has been poisoned. More so than in man, love can be
seen in the birds, animals and plants, in those who have no religion or
culture. Love is more evident in uncivilized men, in backward woodsmen, than in
the so-called progressive, cultured and civilized men of today. And, remember,
the aboriginal people have no developed civilization, culture or religion.
Why is man progressively
becoming so much more barren of love as he professes to be more and more
civilized, cultured and religious, going regularly to temples and to churches
to pray? There are some reasons and I wish to discuss them. If these can be
understood, the eternal stream of love can spring forth. But it is embedded in
stones; it cannot surface. It is walled in on all sides, and the Ganges cannot
gush forth, cannot flow freely.
Love is within man. It is not
imported from the outside. It is not a commodity to be purchased when we go to
the markets. It is there as the fragrance of life. It is inside everyone. The
search for love, the wooing of love, is not a positive action; it is not an
overt act whereby you have to go somewhere and draw it out.
A sculptor was working on a
rock. Someone who had come to see how a statue is made saw no sign of a statue,
he only saw a stone being cut here and there by a chisel and hammer.
"What are you
doing?" the man inquired. "Are you not going to make a statue? I have
come to see a statue being made, but I only see you chipping stone."
The artist said, "The
statue is already hidden inside. There is no need to make it. Somehow, the
useless mass of stone that is fused to it has to be separated from it, and then
the statue will show itself. A statue is not made, it is discovered. It is
uncovered; it is brought to light."
Love is shut up inside man;
it need only be released. The question is not how to produce it, but how to
uncover it. What have we covered ourselves with? What is it that will not allow
love to surface?
Try asking a medical
practitioner what health is. It is very strange, but no doctor in the world can
tell you what health is! With the whole of medical science concerned with
health, isn't there anyone who is able to say what health is? If you ask a
doctor, he will say he can only tell you what the diseases are or what the
symptoms are. He may know the different technical term for each and every
disease and he may also be able to prescribe the cure. But health? About health,
he does not know anything. He can only state that what remains when there is no
disease is health. This is because health is hidden inside man. Health is
beyond the definition of man.
Sickness comes from the
outside hence it can be defined; health comes from within hence it cannot be
defined. Health defies definition. We can only say that the absence of sickness
is health. The truth is, health does not have to be created; it is either
hidden by illness or it reveals itself when the illness goes away or is cured.
Health is inside us. Health is our nature.
Love is also inside us. Love
is our inherent nature. Basically, it is wrong to ask man to create love. The
problem is not how to create love, but how to investigate and find out why it
is not able to manifest itself. What is the hindrance? What is the difficulty?
Where is the dam blocking it?
If there are no barriers,
love will show itself. It is not necessary to persuade it or to guide it. Every
man would be filled with love if it weren't for the barriers of false culture
and of degrading and harmful traditions. Nothing can stifle love. Love is
inevitable. Love is our nature.
The Ganges flows from the
Himalayas. It is water; it simply flows - it does not ask a priest the way to
the ocean. Have you ever seen a river standing at a crossroads asking a
policeman the whereabouts of the ocean? However far the ocean may be, however
hidden it may be, the river will surely find the path. It is inevitable: she
has the inner urge. She has no guidebook, but, infallibly, she will reach her
destination. She will crack through mountains, cross the plains and traverse
the country in her race to reach the ocean. An insatiable desire, a force, an
energy exists within her heart of hearts.
But suppose obstructions are
thrown in her way by man? Suppose dams are constructed by man?
A river can overcome and
break through natural barriers - ultimately they are not barriers to her at all
- but if man-made barriers are created, if dams are engineered across her, it
is possible she may not reach the ocean. Man, the supreme intelligence of
creation, can stop a river from reaching the ocean if he decides to do so.
In nature, there is a
fundamental unity, a harmony. The natural obstructions, the apparent
oppositions seen in nature, are challenges to arouse energy; they serve as
clarion calls to arouse what is latent inside. There is no disharmony in
nature.
When we sow a seed, it may
seem as if the layer of earth above the seed is pressing it down, is
obstructing its growth. It may seem so, but in reality that layer of earth is
not an obstruction; without that layer the seed cannot germinate. The earth
presses down on the seed so that it can mellow, disintegrate, and transform
itself into a sapling. Outwardly it may seem as if the soil is stifling the
seed, but the soil is only performing the duty of a friend. It is a clinical
operation. If a seed does not grow into a plant, we reason that the soil may
not have been proper, that the seed may not have had enough water or that it
may not have received enough sunlight - we do not blame the seed. But if
flowers do not bloom in a man's life we say the man himself is responsible for
it. Nobody thinks of inferior manure, of a shortage of water or of a lack of
sunshine and does something about it, the man himself is accused of being bad.
And so the plant of man has remained undeveloped, has been suppressed by
unfriendliness and has been unable to reach the flowering stage.
Nature is rhythmic harmony.
But the artificiality that man has imposed on nature, the things he has
engineered across it and the mechanical contrivances he has thrown into the
current of life have created obstructions at many places, have stopped the
flow. And the river is made the culprit. "Man is bad; the seed is
poisonous," they say.
I wish to draw your attention
to the fact that the basic obstructions are man-made, are created by man
himself - otherwise the river of love would flow freely and reach the ocean of
God. Love is inherent in man. If the obstructions are removed with awareness,
love can flow. Then, love can rise to touch God, to touch the Supreme.
What are these man-made
obstacles? The most obvious obstruction has been the opposition to sex and to
passion. This barrier has destroyed the possibility of the birth of love in
man.
The simple truth is that sex
is the starting point of love. Sex is the beginning of the journey to love. The
origin, the Gangotri of the Ganges of Love, is sex, passion - and everybody
behaves like its enemy. Every culture, every religion, every guru, every seer
has attacked this Gangotri, this source, and the river has remained bottled up.
The hue and cry has always been, "Sex is sin. Sex is irreligious. Sex is
poison," but we never seem to realize that ultimately it is the sex energy
itself that travels to and reaches the inner ocean of love. Love is the
transformation of sex energy. The flowering of love is from the seed of sex.
Looking at coal, it would
never strike you that when coal is transformed it becomes diamonds. The
elements in a lump of coal are the same as those in a diamond. Essentially, there
is no basic difference between them. After passing through a process taking
thousands of years, coal becomes diamonds.
But coal is not considered
important. When coal is kept in a house it is stored in a place where it may
not be seen by guests, whereas diamonds are worn around the neck or on the
bosom so that everybody can see them. Diamonds and coal are the same: they are
two points on a journey by the same element. If you are against coal because it
has nothing more to offer than black soot at first glance, the possibility of
its transformation into a diamond ends right there. The coal itself could have
been transformed into a diamond. But we hate coal. And so, the possibility of
any progress ends.
Only the energy of sex can
flower into love. But everyone, including mankind's great thinkers, is against
it. This opposition will not allow the seed to sprout, and the palace of love
is destroyed at the foundation. The enmity towards sex has destroyed the
possibility of love. And so, coal is incapable of becoming a diamond.
Because of basic
misconceptions, no one feels the necessity of going through the stages of
acknowledging sex and of developing it and of going through the process of
transforming it. How can we transform him whose enemy we are, whom we oppose,
with whom we are at continuous war? A quarrel between man and his energy has
been forced upon him. Man has been taught to fight against his sex energy, to
oppose his sex urges.
"The mind is poison, so
fight against it," man is told. The mind exists in man, and sex also
exists in him - yet man is expected to be free from inner conflicts. A
harmonious existence is expected of him. He has to fight and to pacify as well.
Such are the teachings of his leaders. On the one hand they drive him mad and
on the other they open asylums to treat him. They spread the germs of sickness
and then build hospitals to cure the sick.
Another important
consideration is that man cannot be separated from sex. Sex is his primary
point; he is born of it. God has made the energy of sex the starting point of
creation. And great men term as sinful what God himself does not consider as
sin! If God considers sex as sin, then there is no greater sinner than God in
this world, no greater sinner in this universe.
Have you never realized that
the blooming of a flower is an expression of passion, that it is a sexual act?
A peacock dances in full glory: a poet will sing a song to it; a saint will
also be filled with joy - but aren't they aware that the dance is also an overt
expression of passion, that it is primarily a sexual act? For whose pleasure
does the peacock dance? The peacock is calling its beloved, its spouse. Papiha
is singing; the cuckoo is singing: a boy has become an adolescent; a girl is
growing into a woman. What is all this? What play, what leela is this? These
are all the indicators of love, of sexual energy. These manifestations of love
are the transformed expressions of sex - bubbling with energy, acknowledging
sex. Throughout one's whole life all acts of love, all attitudes and urges of
love, are flowerings of primary sex energy.
Religion and culture pour
poison against sex into the mind of man. They create conflict, war; they engage
man in battle against his own primary energy - and so man has become weak,
gross, coarse, devoid of love and full of nothingness. Not enmity, but
friendship is to be made with sex. Sex should be elevated to purer heights.
While blessing a newly wed
couple, a sage said to the bride, "May you be the mother of ten children
and, ultimately, may your husband become your eleventh child."
If passion is transformed,
the wife can become the mother; if lust is transcended, sex can become love.
Only sex energy can flower into the force of love. But we have filled man with
antagonism towards sex and the result is that love has not flowered. What comes
later, the form-to-come, can only be made possible by the acceptance of sex.
The stream of love cannot break through because of the strong opposition. Sex,
on the other hand, keeps churning inside, and the consciousness of man is
muddled with sexuality.
Man's consciousness is
becoming more and more sexual. Our songs, poems, paintings, and virtually all
the figures in our temples are centered around sex - because our minds also
revolve around the axis of sex. No animal in the world is as sexual as man. Man
is sexual everywhere - awake or asleep, in his manners as well as in his
etiquette. Every moment man is haunted by sex.
Because of this enmity
towards sex, because of this opposition and suppression, man is decaying from
inside. He can never free himself from something that is the very root of his
life, and because of this constant inner conflict his entire being has become
neurotic. He is sick. This perverted sexuality that is so evident in mankind is
the fault of his so-called leaders and saints; they are to blame for it.
Until man frees himself from
such teachers, moralizers and religious leaders, and from their phony sermons,
the possibility of love surfacing in him is nil.
I remember a tale:
One Sunday a poor farmer was
leaving his house and at the gate he met a childhood friend who had come to see
him.
The farmer said,
"Welcome! But where have you been for so many years? Come in! Look, I have
promised to see some friends and it would be difficult to postpone the visit,
so please rest in my house. I will be back in an hour or so. I will return soon
and we can have a long chat."
The friend said, "Oh no,
wouldn't it be better if I were to come with you? Yet my clothes are very
dirty. If you can just give me something fresh, I will change and come along
with you."
Sometime before, the king had
given the farmer some valuable clothes and the farmer had been saving them for
some grand occasion. Joyfully, he brought them out. His friend put on the
precious coat, the turban, the dhoti and the beautiful shoes. He looked like
the king himself. Looking at his friend, the farmer felt a bit jealous; in
comparison he looked like a servant. He began to wonder if he had made a
mistake, giving away his best outfit, and he began to feel inferior. Now
everyone would look at his friend, he thought, and he would look like an
attendant, like a servant.
He tried to calm his mind by
thinking of himself as a good friend and as a man of God. He would think only
of God and of noble things, he decided. "After all, of what importance is
a fine coat or an expensive turban?" But the more he tried to reason with
himself, the more the coat and the turban encroached on his mind.
On the way, although they
were walking together, passers-by only looked at his friend; nobody noticed the
farmer. He began to feel depressed. He chatted with his friend, but inside he
was thinking about nothing else but that coat and turban!
They reached the house they
were intending to visit and he introduced his friend: "This is my friend,
a childhood friend. He is a very lovely man." And suddenly he blurted,
"And the clothes? They are mine!"
The friend was stunned. Their
hosts were also surprised. He realized as well that the remark had been
uncalled for, but then it was too late. He regretted his blunder and reproached
himself inwardly.
Coming out of the house, he
apologized to his friend.
The friend said, "I was
thunderstruck. How could you say something like that?"
The farmer said, "Sorry.
It was just my tongue. I made a mistake."
But the tongue never lies.
Words only pop out of one's mouth if there is something on one's mind; the
tongue never makes a mistake. He said, "Forgive me. How such a thing was
uttered, I do not know." But he knew full well that the thought had
surfaced from his mind.
They started for another
friend's house. Now he had firmly resolved not to say that the clothes were
his; he had steeled his mind. By the time they had reached the gate he had
reached an irrevocable decision that he would not say the clothes were his.
That poor man didn't know
that the more he resolved not to say anything, the more firmly rooted the inner
awareness that the clothes belonged to him became. Moreover, when are such firm
decisions made? When a man makes a firm resolution, like a vow of celibacy for
example, it means that his sexuality is pushing desperately from inside. If a
man resolves he will eat less or will fast from today on, it implies he has a
deep desire to eat more. Such efforts inevitably result in inner conflict. We
are what our weaknesses are. But we decide to curb them; we resolve to fight
against them - and naturally, this becomes a source of subconscious conflict.
So, engaged in inner
struggle, our farmer went into the house. He began very carefully: "He is
my friend" - but he noticed that nobody was paying any attention to him;
that everybody was looking at his friend and at his clothes with awe, and it
struck him, "That is my coat! And my turban!" But he reminded himself
again not to talk about the clothes. He was resolved. "Everybody has
clothes of some kind or another, poor or rich. It is a trivial matter," he
explained to himself. But the clothes swung before his eyes like a pendulum, to
and fro, to and fro.
He resumed the introduction:
"He is my friend. A childhood friend. A very fine gentleman. And the
clothes? Those are his, and not mine."
The people were surprised.
They had never before heard such an introduction: "The clothes are his and
not mine"!
After they had left, he again
apologized profusely. "A big blunder," he admitted. Now he was
confused about what to do and what not to do. "Clothes never had a hold on
me like this before! Oh God, what has happened to me?"
What had happened to him? The
poor fellow did not know that the technique he was using on himself is such
that even if God himself tried it, the clothes would grab hold of him also!
The friend, now quite indignant,
said he would not go any further with him. The farmer grabbed his arm and said,
"Please don't do that. I would be unhappy for the rest of my life, having
shown such bad manners to a friend. I swear not to mention the clothes again.
With my whole heart, I swear to God I will not mention the clothes any
more."
But one should always be wary
of those who swear because there is something much deeper involved when one
resolves something. A resolution is made by the surface mind, and the thing
against which the resolution has been taken remains inside in the labyrinths of
the subconscious mind. If the mind were divided into ten parts, it would only
be one part, just the upper part, that was committed to the resolve; the
remaining nine parts would be against it. The vow of celibacy is taken by one
part of the mind, for example, while the rest of the mind is mad for sex -
while the rest is crying out for that very thing that has been implanted in man
by God. But for the moment, be that as it may.
They went to a third friend's
house. The farmer held himself back rigorously. Restrained people are very
dangerous, because a live volcano exists inside them. Outwardly they are rigid
and full of restraint, while their urge to let go is tightly harnessed inside.
Please remember, anything
that is forced can neither be continuous nor complete because of the immense
strain involved. You have to relax sometime; sometime you have to rest. How
long can you clench your fist? Twenty-four hours? The tighter you clench it,
the more it tires, and the more quickly it will open up. Work harder, expend
some more energy, and you will tire even more quickly.
There is always a reaction to
an action, and it is always just as prompt. Your hand can remain open all the
time, but it cannot remain clenched in a fist all the time. Anything that tires
you cannot be a natural part of life. Whenever you force something, a period of
rest is bound to follow. And so, the more adept a saint is, the more dangerous
he is. After twenty-four hours of restraint, following the rules of the
scriptures, he will have to relax for at least an hour, and during this period
there will be such an upsurge of suppressed sins he will find himself in the
midst of hell.
So, the farmer held himself
rigorously in check so as not to speak of the clothes. Imagine his condition.
If you are even a little religious, you can imagine his state of mind. If you
have ever been sworn in, or taken a vow, or restrained yourself for some
religious cause, you will understand the pitiable state of his mind very well.
They went into the next
house. The farmer was perspiring all over; he was exhausted. The friend was
also worried.
The farmer was frozen with
anxiety. Slowly and carefully he uttered each and every word, of the
introduction: "Meet my friend. A very old friend, he is. A very nice man,
he is."
For a moment he faltered. A
huge push came from inside. He knew he was washed up. He blurted aloud,
"And the clothes? Pardon me, I won't say anything about them, because I
have sworn not to say anything at all about the clothes!"
What happened to this man has
happened to the whole of mankind. Because of condemnation, sex has become an
obsession, a disease, a perversion. It has become poisoned.
From an early age children
are taught that sex is sin. A girl grows and a boy grows; adolescence comes and
they are married - then a journey into passion commences in the set conviction
that sex is sin. In India the girl is also told her husband is God. How can she
revere as God someone who takes her in sin? The boy is told, "This is your
wife, your partner, your mate." The scriptures say that woman is the gate
to hell, a well of sin, and now the boy feels he has a living demon as his
life's partner. The boy thinks, "Is this my better half - a hell-bound, sin-oriented
better half?" How can any harmony happen in his life?
Traditional teachings have
destroyed the marital life of the whole world. When married life is full of
prejudice, full of poison, there is no possibility for love. If a husband and
wife cannot love each other freely, basically and naturally, then who can love
whom? But this disturbing situation can be rectified; this muddled love can be
purified. This love can be elevated to such lofty heights that it will break
all barriers, resolve all complexes and engulf husband and wife in pure and
divine joy. This sublime love is possible. But if it is nipped in the bud, if
it is stifled, if it is poisoned, what will grow out of it? How can it flower
into a rose of supreme love?
A wandering ascetic camped in
a village. A man came and told him he wanted to realize God.
The ascetic asked, "Have
you ever loved anybody?"
"No, I am not guilty of
such a mundane thing," the man replied. "I have never stooped so low;
I want to realize God."
The ascetic asked again,
"Have you never felt the pangs of love?"
The seeker was emphatic.
"I am telling the truth," he replied.
The poor man spoke honestly.
In the realm of religion to have loved is a disqualification. He was sure that
if he said he had loved someone the ascetic would ask him to rid himself of
love then and there - to renounce the attachment and to leave all worldly
emotions behind before seeking his guidance. So even if he had loved someone,
he felt he must reply in the negative. Where can you find a man who has never
even loved a little?
The monk asked for the third
time, "Say something. Think carefully. Not even a little love - for
somebody, for anybody? Haven't you even loved one person a little?"
The aspirant said,
"Pardon me, but why do you keep harping on the same question? I wouldn't
touch love with a ten-foot pole. I want to attain self-realization. I want
Godhood."
To this the ascetic replied,
"Then you will have to excuse me. Please approach someone else. My
experience tells me that if you had loved somebody, anybody, that if you had
even had a glimpse of love, I could help enlarge it, I could help it to grow -
probably to reach God. But if you have never loved, then you have nothing in
you; you have no seed to grow into a tree. Go and make inquiries of someone
else. My friend, in the absence of love I do not see any opening for God."
Similarly, if there is no
love between husband and wife.... You are sadly mistaken if you think that the
husband who does not love his wife is able to love his children. The wife will
only be able to love her son to the same degree she loves her husband, because
the child is the reflection of her husband. But if there is no love for the
husband, how can there be love for the child? And if the son is not given love,
if his nourishing and his rearing are not with love, how do you expect him to
love his mother and father? A family is a unit of life; the world itself is a
large family. But family life has been poisoned by this condemnation of sex.
And we moan that love is nowhere to be found! Under the circumstances, how do
you expect to find love anywhere?
Everyone says he loves.
Mothers, wives, sons, brothers, sisters, friends - all say they love. But if
you observe life in its totality, there is no love evident in life at all. If
so many people are full of love there ought to be a shower of love; there ought
to be a garden full of flowers, more flowers and even more flowers. If there
were a lamp of love shining in every home, how much light there would be in
this world! But instead, we find a pervading atmosphere of repulsion. There is
not one single ray of love to be found in this sorry scheme of things.
It is snobbery to believe
that love is everywhere. And so long as we remain immersed in this illusion, the
search for truth cannot even begin. Nobody loves anybody here. And until
natural sex is accepted without reservation there can be no love. Until then,
nobody can love anybody.
What I want to say is this:
sex is divine. The primal energy of sex has the reflection of God in it. It is
obvious: it is the energy that creates new life. And that is the greatest, most
mysterious force of all.
End this enmity with sex. If
you want a shower of love in your life, renounce this conflict with sex.
Accept sex with joy.
Acknowledge its sacredness. Receive it gratefully and embrace it more and more
deeply. You will be surprised that sex can reveal such sacredness; it will
reveal its sacredness to the degree of your acceptance. And as sinful and
irreverent as your approach is, that is how ugly and sinful the sex that
confronts you will be.
When a man approaches his
wife he should have a sacred feeling, as if he were going to a temple.
And when a wife goes to her
husband she should be full of the reverence one has nearing God. In the moments
of sex, lovers pass through coitus, and that stage is very near to the temple
of God, to where he is manifest in creative formlessness.
My conjecture is that man had
his first luminous glimpse of samadhi during the experience of intercourse.
Only in the moments of coitus did man realize that it was possible to feel such
profound love, to experience such illuminating bliss. And those who meditated
on this truth in the right frame of mind, those who meditated on the phenomenon
of sex, of intercourse, came to the conclusion that in the moments of climax
the mind becomes empty of thoughts. All thoughts drain out at that moment. And
this emptiness of mind, this void, this vacuum, this freezing of the mind, is
the cause of the shower of divine joy.
Having unraveled the secret
up to this point, man dug further. If the mind could be freed of thoughts, if
the thought-ripples of consciousness could be stilled by some other process, he
reasoned, he could attain to pure bliss! And from this developed the system of
yoga, from this came meditation and prayer. This new approach proved that even
without coitus the consciousness could be stilled and thoughts evaporated. Man
discovered that the delight of amazing proportions obtained during an act of
intercourse could also be obtained without it.
By the nature of the process,
an act of coitus can only be momentary because it involves the consummation of
a flow of energy. To the pure joy, to the perfect love, to the beautiful solace
in which a yogi exists all the time, a couple only reaches for a moment or so.
But, basically, there is no difference between them. He who said that the
vishyanand and the brahmanand, that the one who indulges his senses and the one
who indulges in God are brothers, has stated an inadvertent truth.
Both come from the same womb.
The only difference is the distance between earth and sky.
At this stage I wish to give
you the first principle. If you want to know the elemental truth about love,
the first requisite is to accept the sacredness of sex, to accept the divinity
of sex in the same way you accept God's existence - with an open heart. And the
more fully you accept sex with an open heart and mind, the freer you will be of
it. But the more you suppress it the more you will become bound to it, like
that farmer who became a slave to his clothes. The measure of your acceptance
is the measure of your deliverance. The total acceptance of life, of all that
is natural in life, of all that is God-given in life, will lead you to the
highest realms of divinity - to heights that are unknown, to heights that are
sublime. I call that acceptance, theism. And that faith in the God-given is the
door to liberation.
I regard those precepts which
keep man from accepting that which is natural in life and in the divine scheme
as atheism. "Oppose this; suppress that. The natural is sinful, bad,
lustful. Leave this; leave that." All this constitutes atheism, as I
understand it. Those who preach renunciation are atheists.
Accept life in its pure and
natural form and thrive on the fullness of it. The fullness itself will elevate
you, step by step. And this very same acceptance of sex will uplift you to
serene heights you had not imagined possible. If sex is coal, the day is
certain to come when it shows itself as diamonds.
And that is the first
principle.
The second fundamental thing
I want to tell you is about something that has, by now, become hardened within
us by civilization, culture and religion. And that is the ego, the
consciousness that "I am".
The nature of the sex energy
goads it to flow towards love, but the hurdle of "I" has fenced it in
like a wall and so love cannot flow. The "I" is very powerful, in bad
as well as in good people, in the unholy as well as in the holy. Bad people may
assert the "I" in many ways, but good people also drum the
"I" loudly: they want to go to heaven; they want to be delivered;
they have renounced the world; they have built temples; they do not sin; they
want to do this; they want to do that. But that "I", that guiding signal,
is ever present.
The stronger a person's ego
is, the harder it is for him to unite with anybody. The ego comes in between;
the "I" asserts itself. It is a wall. It proclaims, "You are you
and I am I." And so even the most intimate experience does not bring
people close to each other. The bodies may be near but the people are far
apart. So long as there is this "I" inside, this feeling of otherness
cannot be avoided.
One day, Sartre said a
wonderful thing: "The other is hell." But he didn't explain any further
why the other was hell, or even why the other was the other. The other is the
other because I am I, and while I am I, the world around is the other -
different and apart, segregated - and there is no rapport.
As long as there is this
feeling of separation, love cannot be known. Love is the experience of unity.
The demolition of walls, the
fusion of two energies is what the experience of love is. Love is the ecstasy
when the walls between two people crumble down, when two lives meet, when two
lives unite.
When such a harmony exists
between two people I call it love. And when it exists between one man and the
masses, I call it communion with God. If you can become immersed with me in
such an experience - so that all barriers melt, so that an osmosis takes place
at the spiritual level - then that is love. And if such a unity happens between
me and everyone else and I lose my identity in the All, then that attainment,
that merging, is with God, with the Almighty, with the Omniscient, with the
Universal Consciousness, with the Supreme or whatsoever you want to call it.
And so, I say that love is the first step and that God is the last step - the
finest and the final destination.
How is it possible to erase
myself?
Unless I dissolve myself, how
can the other unite with me? The other is created as a reaction to my
"I". The louder I shout "I", the more forceful becomes the
existence of the other. The other is the echo of "I".
And what is "I"?
Have you ever thought calmly about it? Is it in your leg or your hand, in your
head or your heart? Or is it just the ego?
What and where is your
"I", your ego? The feeling of it is there, yet it is to be found in
no particular place. Sit quietly for a moment and search for that
"I". You may be surprised, but in spite of an intense search you will
not find your "I" anywhere. When you search deeply inside you will
realize there is no "I". As such, there is no ego. When there is the
truth of the self the "I" is not there.
The well-revered monk Nagsen
was sent for by the Emperor Malind, to grace his court.
The messenger went to Nagsen
and said, "Monk Nagsen, the emperor wishes to see you. I have come to
invite you."
Nagsen replied, "If you
want me to, I will come. But, pardon me, there is no person like Nagsen here.
It's only a name, only a temporary label."
The courtier reported to the
emperor that Nagsen was a very strange man: he had replied he would come, but
had said that there was no such man as Nagsen there. The emperor was struck
with wonder.
Nagsen arrived on time, in
the royal chariot, and the emperor received him at the gate. "Monk Nagsen,
I welcome you!" he exclaimed.
Hearing this, the monk
started to laugh. "I accept your hospitality as Nagsen, but please
remember there is nobody named Nagsen."
The emperor said, "You
are talking in riddles. If you are not you, then who is accepting my
invitation?
Who is replying to this
welcome?"
Nagsen looked behind him and
asked, "Isn't this the chariot I came in?"
"Yes, it is one and the
same."
"Please remove the
horses."
It was done.
Pointing to the horses, the
monk asked, "Is this the chariot?"
The emperor said, "How
can the horses be called a chariot?"
At a sign from the monk, the
horses were led away, and the poles used to tie the horses were removed.
"Are these poles your
chariot?"
"Of course not, these
are the poles and not the chariot."
The monk went on, ordering
the removal of the parts one by one, and to each inquiry the emperor had to
reply, "This is not the chariot."
At last nothing remained.
The monk asked, "Where
is your chariot now? To each and every item taken away you have said, 'This is
not the chariot.' Then tell me, where is your chariot now?"
The revelation startled the
emperor.
The monk continued. "Do
you follow me? The chariot was an assembly; it was a collection of certain
things. The chariot had no being of its own. Please look inside. Where is your
ego? Where is your 'I'?"
You will not find that
"I" anywhere. It is a manifestation of many energies; that is all.
Think about each and every limb, about each and every aspect of yourself, and
then eliminate everything, one by one. Ultimately, nothingness will remain. Love
is born of that nothingness. That nothingness is God.
In a certain village a man
opened a fish shop with a big sign: "Fresh Fish Sold Here."
The very first day a man came
into the shop and read, "Fresh Fish Sold Here". He laughed.
"'Fresh Fish'? Are stale fish sold anywhere? What is the point of writing
'fresh' fish?"
The shopkeeper decided he was
right; besides, "fresh" gave the idea of "stale" to the
customers. He deleted "fresh" from the signboard. The board now read,
"Fish Sold Here."
An old lady, visiting the
shop the next day, read aloud, "'Fish Sold Here'? Do you also sell fish
somewhere else?"
"Here" was erased.
Now the board read, "Fish Sold."
The third day yet another
customer came to the shop and said "'Fish Sold'? Does anybody give fish
for free?"
The word "Sold" was
deleted. Only "Fish" was left now.
An aged man came and said to
the shopkeeper, "'Fish'? A blind man, even at a distance, could tell from
the smell that fish are sold here."
"Fish" was removed.
The board was now blank.
A passer-by asked, "Why
a blank board?"
The board was also removed.
Nothing remained after the process of elimination; every word had been removed,
one by one. And what was left behind was nothing, an emptiness.
Love can only be born out of
emptiness. Only a void is capable of merging with another void; only zero can
unite totally with another zero. Not two individuals, but two vacuums can meet,
because now there is no barrier. All else has walls; a vacuum has none.
So the second thing to
remember is that love is born when individuality vanishes, when "I"
and "the other" are no more. Whatsoever remains then is everything,
the limitless - but no "I". With that attainment, all barriers
crumble and the onrush of the ever-ready Ganges takes place.
We dig a well. Water is
already there, inside; it doesn't have to be brought from anywhere. We just dig
up the earth and stones and remove them. What is it we do exactly? We create an
emptiness so that the water that is hidden inside can find a space to move
into, a space in which to show itself.
That which is inside wants
room; it wants space. It craves an emptiness - which it is not getting - so it
can come out, so it can burst forth. If a well is full of sand and stones, the
moment we remove the sand and stones water will surge upwards. Similarly, man
is full of love, but love needs space to surface. As long as your heart and
soul are saying "I" you are a well of sand and stones, and the stream
of love will not bubble up in you.
I have heard that there was
once an ancient and majestic tree, with branches spreading out towards the sky.
When it was in a flowering mood, butterflies of all shapes, colors and sizes
danced around it. When it grew blossoms and bore fruit, birds from far lands
came and sang in it. The branches, like outstretched hands, blessed all who
came and sat in their shade. A small boy used to come and play under it, and
the big tree developed an affection for the small boy.
Love between big and small is
possible, if the big is not aware that it is big. The tree did not know it was
big; only man has that kind of knowledge. The big always has the ego as its
prime concern, but for love, nobody is big or small. Love embraces whomsoever
comes near.
So the tree developed a love
for this small boy who used to come to play near it. Its branches were high,
but it bent and bowed them down so that he might pluck its flowers and pick its
fruit. Love is ever ready to bow; the ego is never ready to bend. If you
approach the ego, its branches will stretch upwards even more; it will stiffen
so you cannot reach it.
The playful child came, and
the tree bowed its branches. The tree was very pleased when the child plucked
some flowers; its entire being was filled with the joy of love. Love is always
happy when it can give something; the ego is always happy when it can take.
The boy grew. Sometimes he
slept on the tree's lap, sometimes he ate its fruit, and sometimes he wore a
crown of the tree's flowers and acted like a jungle king. One becomes like a
king when the flowers of love are there, but one becomes poor and miserable
when the thorns of the ego are present. To see the boy wearing a crown of
flowers and dancing about filled the tree with joy. It nodded in love; it sang
in the breeze. The boy grew even more. He began to climb the tree to swing on
its branches. The tree felt very happy when the boy rested on its branches.
Love is happy when it gives comfort to someone; the ego is only happy when it
gives discomfort.
With the passage of time the
burden of other duties came to the boy. Ambition grew; he had exams to pass; he
had friends to chat with and to wander about with, so he did not come often.
But the tree waited anxiously for him to come. It called from its soul,
"Come. Come. I am waiting for you." Love waits day and night. And the
tree waited. The tree felt sad when the boy did not come. Love is sad when it
cannot share; love is sad when it cannot give. Love is grateful when it can
share. When it can surrender, totally, love is the happiest.
As he grew, the boy came less
and less to the tree. The man who becomes big, whose ambitions grow, finds less
and less time for love. The boy was now engrossed in worldly affairs.
One day, while he was passing
by, the tree said to him, "I wait for you but you do not come. I expect
you daily."
The boy said, "What do
you have? Why should I come to you? Have you any money? I am looking for
money." The ego is always motivated. Only if there is some purpose to be
served will the ego come. But love is motiveless. Love is its own reward.
The startled tree said,
"You will come only if I give something?" That which withholds is not
love.
The ego amasses, but love
gives unconditionally. "We don't have that sickness, and we are
joyful,"
the tree said. "Flowers
bloom on us. Many fruits grow on us. We give soothing shade. We dance in the
breeze, and sing songs. Innocent birds hop on our branches and chirp even
though we don't have any money. The day we get involved with money, we will
have to go to the temples like you weak men do, to learn how to obtain peace,
to learn how to find love. No, we do not have any need for money."
The boy said, "Then why
should I come to you? I will go where there is money. I need money." The
ego asks for money because it needs power.
The tree thought for a while
and said, "Don't go anywhere else, my dear. Pick my fruit and sell it.
You will get money that
way."
The boy brightened
immediately. He climbed up and picked all the tree's fruit; even the unripe
ones were shaken down. The tree felt happy, even though some twigs and branches
were broken, even though some of its leaves had fallen to the ground. Getting
broken also makes love happy, but even after getting, the ego is not happy. The
ego always desires more. The tree didn't notice that the boy hadn't even once
looked back to thank him. It had had its thanks when the boy accepted the offer
to pick and sell its fruit.
The boy did not come back for
a long time. Now he had money and he was busy making more money from that
money. He had forgotten all about the tree. Years passed. The tree was sad. It
yearned for the boy's return - like a mother whose breasts are filled with milk
but whose son is lost.
Her whole being craves for
her son; she searches madly for her son so he can come to lighten her.
Such was the inner cry of
that tree. Its entire being was in agony.
After many years, now an
adult, the boy came to the tree.
The tree said, "Come, my
boy. Come embrace me."
The man said, "Stop that
sentimentality. That was a childhood thing. I am not a child any more."
The ego sees love as madness, as a childish fantasy.
But the tree invited him:
"Come, swing on my branches. Come dance. Come play with me."
The man said, "Stop all
this useless talk! I need to build a house. Can you give me a house?"
The tree exclaimed: "A
house! I am without a house." Only men live in houses. Nobody else lives
in a house but man. And do you notice his condition after his confinement among
four walls? The bigger his buildings, the smaller man becomes. "We do not
stay in houses, but you can cut and take away my branches - and then you may be
able to build a house."
Without wasting any time, the
man brought an axe and severed all the branches of the tree. Now the tree was
just a bare trunk. But love cares not for such things - even if its limbs are
severed for the loved one. Love is giving; love is ever ready to give.
The man didn't even bother to
thank the tree. He built his house. And the days flew into years.
The trunk waited and waited.
It wanted to call for him, but it had neither branches nor leaves to give it
strength. The wind blew by, but it couldn't even manage to give the wind a
message. And still its soul resounded with one prayer only: "Come. Come,
my dear. Come." But nothing happened.
Time passed and the man had
now become old. Once he was passing by and he came and stood by the tree.
The tree asked, "What
else can I do for you? You have come after a very, very long time."
The old man said, "What
else can you do for me? I want to go to distant lands to earn more money.
I need a boat, to
travel."
Cheerfully, the tree said,
"But that's no problem, my love. Cut my trunk, and make a boat from it. I
would be so very happy if I could help you go to faraway lands to earn money.
But, please remember, I will always be awaiting your return."
The man brought a saw, cut
down the trunk, made a boat and sailed away.
Now the tree is a small
stump. And it waits for its loved one to return. It waits and it waits and it
waits. The man will never return; the ego only goes where there is something to
gain and now the tree has nothing, absolutely nothing to offer. The ego does
not go where there is nothing to gain.
The ego is an eternal beggar,
in a continuous state of demand, and love is charity. Love is a king, an
emperor! Is there any greater king than love?
I was resting near that stump
one night. It whispered to me, "That friend of mine has not come back yet.
I am very worried in case he might have drowned, or in case he might be lost.
He may be lost in one of those faraway countries. He might not even be alive
any more. How I wish for news of him! As I near the end of my life, I would be
satisfied with some news of him at least. Then I could die happily. But he
would not come even if I could call him. I have nothing left to give and he
only understands the language of taking."
The ego only understands the
language of taking; the language of giving is love.
I cannot say anything more
than that. Moreover, there is nothing more to be said than this: if life can
become like that tree, spreading its branches far and wide so that one and all
can take shelter in its shade, then we will understand what love is. There are
no scriptures, no charts, no dictionaries for love. There is no set of
principles for love.
I wondered what I could say
about love! Love is so difficult to describe. Love is just there. You could
probably see it in my eyes if you came up and looked into them. I wonder if you
can feel it as my arms spread in an embrace.
Love.
What is love?
If love is not felt in my
eyes, in my arms, in my silence, then it can never be realized from my words.
I am grateful for your
patient hearing. And finally, I bow to the Supreme seated in all of us.
Please accept my respects.
EmoticonEmoticon