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Osho on Disciple
Receptivity
Osho -
Some
introductory
points: First,
the
world
of
Vigyana Bhairava Tantra
is
not
intellectual,
it
is
not
philosophical.
Doctrine
is
meaningless
to
it.
It
is
concerned
with
method,
with
technique
–
not
with
principles
at
all.
The
word
‘tantra’
means
technique,
the
method,
the
path.
So
it
is
not
philosophical
–
note
this.
It
is
not
concerned
with
intellectual
problems
and
inquiries.
It
is
not
concerned
with
the
”why”
of
things,
it
is
concerned
with
”how”;
not
with
what
is
truth,
but
how
the
truth
can
be
attained.
Tantra
means
technique.
So
this
treatise
is
a
scientific
one.
Science
is
not
concerned
with
why,
science
is
concerned
with
how.
That
is
the
basic
difference
between
philosophy
and
science.
Philosophy
asks,
”Why
this
existence?”
Science
asks,
”How
this
existence?”
The
moment
you
ask
the
question,
how?,
method,
technique,
become
important.
Theories
become
meaningless;
experience
becomes
the
center.
Tantra
is
science,
tantra
is
not
philosophy.
To
understand
philosophy
is
easy
because
only
your
intellect
is
required.
If
you
can
understand
language,
if
you
can
understand
concept,
you
can
understand
philosophy.
You
need
not
change;
you
require
no
transformation.
As
you
are,
you
can
understand
philosophy
–
but
not Tantra. You
will
need
a
change...
rather,
a
mutation.
Unless
YOU
are
different
Tantra
cannot
be
understood,
because
Tantra
is
not
an
intellectual
proposition,
it
is
an
experience. Unless
you
are
receptive,
ready,
vulnerable
to
the
experience,
it
is
not
going
to
come
to
you.
Philosophy
is
concerned
with
the
mind.
Your
head
is
enough;
your
totality
is
not
required.
Tantra
needs
you
in
your
totality.
It
is
a
deeper
challenge.
You
will
have
to
be
in
it
wholly.
It
is
not
fragmentary.
A
different
approach,
a
different
attitude,
a
different
mind
to
receive
it
is
required.
Because
of
this,
Devi
is
asking
apparently
philosophical
questions.
Tantra
starts
with
Devi’s
questions.
All
the
questions
can
be
tackled
philosophically.
Really,
any
question
can
be
tackled
in
two
ways:
philosophically
or
totally,
intellectually
or
existentially.
For
example,
if
someone
asks,
”What
is
love?”
you
can
tackle
it
intellectually,
you
can
discuss,
you
can
propose
theories,
you
can
argue
for
a
particular
hypothesis.
You
can
create
a
system,
a
doctrine
–
and
you
may
not
have
known
love
at
all.
To
create
a
doctrine,
experience
is
not
needed.
Really,
on
the
contrary,
the
less
you
know
the
better
because
then
you
can
propose
a
system
unhesitatingly.
Only
a
blind
man
can
easily
define
what
light
is.
When
you
do
not
know
you
are
bold.
Ignorance
is
always
bold;
knowledge
hesitates.
And
the
more
you
know,
the
more
you
feel
that
the
ground
underneath
is
dissolving.
The
more
you
know,
the
more
you
feel
how
ignorant
you
are.
And
those
who
are
really
wise,
they
become
ignorant.
They
become
as
simple
as
children,
or
as
simple
as
idiots.
The
less
you
know,
the
better.
To
be
philosophical,
to
be
dogmatic,
to
be
doctrinaire
–
this
is
easy.
To
tackle
a
problem
intellectually
is
very
easy.
But
to
tackle
a
problem
existentially
–
not
just
to
think
about
it,
but
to
live
it
through,
to
go
through
it,
to
allow
yourself
to
be
transformed
through
it
–
is
difficult.
That
is,
to
know
love
one
will
have
to
be
in
love.
That
is
dangerous
because
you
will
not
remain
the
same.
The
experience
is
going
to
change
you.
The
moment
you
enter
love,
you
enter
a
different
person.
And
when
you
come
out
you
will
not
be
able
to
recognize
your
old
face;
it
will
not
belong
to
you.
A
discontinuity
will
have
happened.
Now
there
is
a
gap,
the
old
man
is
dead
and
the
new
man
has
come.
That
is
what
is
known
as
rebirth
–
being
twice-born.
Tantra
is
non-philosophical
and
existential.
So
of
course
Devi
asks
questions
which
appear
to
be
philosophical,
but
Shiva
is
not
going
to
answer
them
that
way.
So
it
is
better
to
understand
it
in
the
beginning;
otherwise
you
will
be
puzzled,
because
Shiva
is
not
going
to
answer
a
single
question.
All
the
questions
that
Devi
is
asking,
Shiva
is
not
going
to
answer
at
all.
And
still
he
answers!
And
really,
only
he
has
answered
them
and
no
one
else
–
but
on
a
different
plane.
Devi
asks,
”What
is
your
reality,
my
lord?”
He
is
not
going
to
answer
it.
On
the
contrary,
he
will
give
a
technique.
And
if
Devi
goes
through
this
technique,
she
will
know.
So
the
answer
is
round-about;
it
is
not
direct.
He
is
not
going
to
answer
”Who
am
I.”
He
will
give
a
technique
–
do
it
and
you
will
know.
For
tantra,
doing
is
knowing,
and
there
is
no
other
knowing.
Unless
you
do
something,
unless
you
change,
unless
you
have
a
different
perspective
to
look
at,
to
look
with,
unless
you
move
in
an
altogether
different
dimension
than
the
intellect,
there
is
no
answer.
Answers
can
be
given
–
they
are
all
lies.
All
philosophies
are
lies.
You
ask
a
question
and
the
philosophy
gives
you
an
answer.
It
satisfies
you
or
doesn’t
satisfy
you.
If
it
satisfies
you,
you
become
a
convert
to
the
philosophy,
but
you
remain
the
same.
If it doesn’t satisfy you, you go on searching for some
other philosophy to be converted to. But you remain the same;
you are not touched at all, you are not changed.
So
whether
you
are
a
Hindu
or
a
Mohammedan
or
a
Christian
or
a
Jain,
it
makes
no
difference. The
real
person
behind
the
facade
of
a
Hindu
or
a
Mohammedan
or
a
Christian
is
the
same.
Only
words
differ,
or
clothes.
The
man
who
is
going
to
the
church
or
to
the
temple
or
to
the
mosque
is
the
same
man.
Only
faces
differ,
and
they
are
faces
which
are
false;
they
are
masks.
Behind
the
masks
you
will
find
the
same
man
–
the
same
anger,
the
same
aggression,
the
same
violence,
the
same
greed,
the
same
lust
–
everything
the
same.
Is
Mohammedan
sexuality
different
from
Hindu
sexuality?
Is
Christian
violence
different
from
Hindu
violence?
It
is
the
same!
The
reality
remains
the
same;
only
clothes
differ.
Tantra
is
not
concerned
with
your
clothes,
tantra
is
concerned
with
you.
If
you
ask
a
question
it
shows
where
you
are.
It
shows
also
that
wherever
you
are
you
cannot
see;
that
is
why
there
is
the
question.
A
blind
man
asks,
”What
is
light?”
and
philosophy
will
start
answering
what
is
light.
Tantra
will
know
only
this:
if
a
man
is
asking
”What
is
light?”
it
shows
only
that
he
is
blind.
Tantra
will
start
operating
on
the
man,
changing
the
man,
so
that
he
can
see.
Tantra
will
not
say
what
is
light.
Tantra
will
tell
how
to
attain
insight,
how
to
attain
seeing,
how
to
attain
vision.
When
the
vision
is
there,
the
answer
will
be
there.
Tantra
will
not
give
you
the
answer;
tantra
will
give
you
the
technique
to
attain
the
answer.
Now,
this
answer
is
not
going
to
be
intellectual.
If
you
say
something
about
light
to
a
blind
man,
this
is
intellectual.
If
the
blind
man
himself
becomes
capable
of
seeing,
this
is
existential.
This
is
what
I
mean
when
I
say
that
tantra
is
existential.
So
Shiva
is
not
going
to
answer
Devi’s
questions,
still,
he
will
answer
–
the
first
thing.
The
second
thing:
this
is
a
different
type
of
language.
You
must
know
something
about
it
before
we
enter
into
it.
All
the
tantra
treatises
are
dialogues
between
Shiva
and
Devi. Devi
questions
and
Shiva
answers.
All
the
tantra
treatises
start
that
way.
Why?
Why
this
method?
It
is
very
significant.
It
is
not
a
dialogue
between
a
teacher
and
a
disciple,
it
is
a
dialogue
between
two
lovers.
And
Tantra
signifies
through
it
a
very
meaningful
thing:
that
the
deeper
teachings
cannot
be
given
unless
there
is
love
between
the
two
–
the
disciple
and
the
master.
The
disciple
and
master
must
become
deep
lovers.
Only
then
can
the
higher,
the
beyond,
be
expressed.
So
it
is
a
language
of
love;
the
disciple
must
be
in
an
attitude
of
love.
But
not
only
this,
because
friends
can
be
lovers. Tantra
says
a
disciple
moves
as
receptivity,
so
the
disciple
must
be
in
a
feminine
receptivity;
only
then
is
something
possible.
You
need
not
be
a
woman
to
be
a
disciple,
but
you
need
to
be
in
a
feminine
attitude
of
receptivity.
When
Devi
asks,
it
means
the
feminine
attitude
asks.
Why
this
emphasis
on
the
feminine
attitude?
Man and woman are not only physically different, they
are psychologically
different.
Sex
is
not
only
a
difference
in
the
body;
it
is
a
difference
in
psychologies
also.
A
feminine
mind
means
receptivity
–
total
receptivity,
surrender,
love.
A
disciple
needs
a
feminine
psychology;
otherwise
he
will
not
be
able
to
learn.
You
can
ask,
but
if
you
are
not
open
then
you
cannot
be
answered.
You
can
ask
a
question
and
still
remain
closed.
Then
the
answer
cannot
penetrate
you.
Your
doors
are
closed;
you
are
dead.
You
are
not
open.
A
feminine
receptivity
means
a
womb-like
receptivity
in
the
inner
depth,
so
that
you
can
receive.
And
not
only
that
–
much
more
is
implied.
A
woman
is
not
only
receiving
something,
the
moment
she
receives
it,
it
becomes
a
part
of
her
body.
A
child
is
received.
A
woman
conceives;
the
moment
there
is
conception,
the
child
has
become
part
of
the
feminine
body.
It
is
not
alien,
it
is
not
foreign.
It
has
been
absorbed.
Now
the
child
will
live
not
as
something
added
to
the
mother,
but
just
as
a
part,
just
as
the
mother.
And
the
child
is
not
only
received:
the
feminine
body
becomes
creative;
the
child
begins
to
grow.
A
disciple
needs
a
womb-like
receptivity.
Whatsoever
is
received
is
not
to
be
gathered
as
dead
knowledge.
It
must
grow
in
you;
it
must
become
blood
and
bones
in
you.
It
must
become
a
part,
now.
It
must
grow!
This
growth
will
change
you,
will
transform
you
–
the
receiver.
That
is
why
Tantra
uses
this
device.
Every
treatise
starts
with
Devi
asking
a
question
and
Shiva
replying
to
it.
Devi
is
Shiva’s
consort,
his
feminine
part.
One
thing
more....
Now
modern
psychology,
depth
psychology
particularly,
says
that
man
is
both
man
and
woman.
No
one
is
just
male
and
no
one
is
just
female;
everyone
is
bi-sexual.
Both
sexes
are
there.
This
is
a
very
recent
research
in
the
West,
but
for
tantra
this
has
been
one
of
the
most
basic
concepts
for
thousands
of
years.
You
must
have
seen
some
pictures
of
Shiva
as Ardhanarishwar–
half
man,
half
woman.
There
is
no
other
concept
like
it
in
the
whole
history
of
man.
Shiva
is
depicted
as
half
man,
half
woman.
So
Devi
is
not
just
a
consort,
she
is
Shiva’s
other
half.
And
unless
a
disciple
becomes
the
other
half
of
the
master
it
is
impossible
to
convey
the
higher
teachings,
the
esoteric
methods.
When
you
become
one
then
there
is
no
doubt.
When
you
are
one
with
the
master
–
so
totally
one,
so
deeply
one
–
there
is
no
argument,
no
logic,
no
reason.
One
simply
absorbs;
one
becomes
a
womb.
And
then
the
teaching
begins
to
grow
in
you
and
change
you.
That
is
why
tantra
is
written
in
love
language.
Something
must
also
be
understood
about
love
language.
There
are
two
types
of
language:
logical
language
and
love
language.
There
are
basic
differences
between
the
two.
Logical
language
is
aggressive,
argumentative,
violent.
If
I
use
logical
language
I
become
aggressive
upon
your
mind.
I
try
to
convince
you,
to
convert
you,
to
make
a
puppet
of
you.
My
argument
is
”right”
and
you
are
”wrong.”
Logical
language
is
egocentric:
”I
am
right
and
you
are
wrong,
so
I
must
prove
that
I
am
right
and
you
are
wrong.”
I
am
not
concerned
with
you,
I
am
concerned
with
my
ego.
My
ego
is
always
”right.”
Love
language
is
totally
different.
I
am
not
concerned
with
my
ego;
I
am
concerned
with
you.
I
am
not
concerned
to
prove
something,
to
strengthen
my
ego.
I
am
concerned
to
help
you.
It
is
a
compassion
to
help
you
to
grow,
to
help
you
to
transform,
to
help
you
to
be
reborn.
Secondly,
logic
will
always
be
intellectual.
Concepts
and
principles
will
be
significant,
arguments
will
be
significant.
With
love
language
what
is
said
is
not
so
significant;
rather,
it
is
the
way
it
is
said.
The
container,
the
word
is
not
important;
the
content,
the
message
is
more
important.
It
is
a
heart-to-heart
talk,
not
a
mind-to-mind
discussion.
It
is
not
a
debate,
it
is
a
communion.
So
this
is
rare:
Devi
is
sitting
in
the
lap
of
Shiva
and
asking,
and
Shiva
answers.
It
is
a
love
dialogue
–
no
conflict,
as
if
Shiva
is
speaking
to
himself.
Why
this
emphasis
on
love
–
love
language?
Because
if
you
are
in
love
with
your
master,
then
the
whole
gestalt
changes;
it
becomes
different.
Then
you
are
not
hearing
his
words.
Then
you
are
drinking
him.
Then
words
are
irrelevant.
Really,
the
silence
between
the
words
becomes
more
significant.
What
he
is
saying
may
be
meaningful
or
it
may
not
be
meaningful...
but
it
is
his
eyes,
his
gestures,
his
compassion,
his
love.
That
is
why
tantra
has
a
fixed
device,
a
structure.
Every
treatise
starts
with
Devi
asking
and
Shiva
answering.
No
argument
is
going
to
be
there,
no
wastage
of
words.
There
are
very
simple
statements
of
fact,
telegraphic
messages
with
no
view
to
convince,
but
just
to
relate.
If
you
encounter
Shiva
with
a
question
with
a
closed
mind,
he
will
not
answer
you
in
this
way.
First
your
closedness
has
to
be
broken.
Then
he
will
have
to
be
aggressive.
Then
your
prejudices,
then
your
preconceptions
have
to
be
destroyed.
Unless
you
are
cleared
completely
of
your
past,
nothing
can
be
given
to
you.
But
this
is
not
so
with
his
consort Devi;
with
Devi
there
is
no
past.
Remember,
when
you
are
deeply
in
love
your
mind
ceases
to
be.
There
is
no
past;
only
the
present
moment
becomes
everything.
When
you
are
in
love
the
present
is
the
only
time,
the
now
is
all
–
no
past,
no
future.
So
Devi
is
just
open.
There
is
no
defense
–
nothing
to
be
cleared,
nothing
to
be
destroyed.
The
ground
is
ready,
only
a
seed
has
to
be
dropped.
The
ground
is
not
only
ready,
but
welcoming,
receptive,
asking
to
be
impregnated.
So
all
these
sayings
that
we
are
going
to
discuss
will
be
telegraphic.
They
are
just
sutras,
but
each
sutra,
each
telegraphic
message
given
by
Shiva
is
worth
a
Veda,
worth
a
Bible,
worth
a
Koran.
Each
single
sentence
can
become
the
base
of
a
great
scripture.
Scriptures
are
logical
–
you
have
to
propose,
defend,
argue.
Here
there
is
no
argument,
just
simple
statements
of
love.
Thirdly,
the
very
words
Vigyana Bhairava Tantra
mean
the
technique
of
going
beyond
consciousness.
Vigyana
means
consciousness, Bhairava
means
the
state
which
is
beyond
consciousness,
and
Tantra
means
the
method:
the
method
of
going
beyond
consciousness.
This
is
the
supreme
doctrine
–
without
any
doctrine.We
are
unconscious,
so
all
the
religious
teachings
are
concerned
with
how
to
go
beyond
unconsciousness,
how
to
be conscious.
For
example, Krishnamurti,
Zen,
they
are
all
concerned
with
how
to
create
more
consciousness, because
we
are
unconscious.
So
how
to
be
more
aware,
alert?
From
unconsciousness,
how
to
move
toward consciousness?
But
tantra
says
that
this
is
a
duality
–
unconscious
and
conscious.
If
you
move
from
unconsciousness
to
consciousness,
you
are
moving
from
one
duality
to
another.
Move
beyond
both!
Unless
you
move
beyond
both
you
can
never
reach
the
ultimate,
so
be
neither
the
unconscious
nor
the
conscious;
just
go
beyond,
just
be.
Be
neither
the
conscious
nor
the
unconscious
–
just
BE!
This
is
going
beyond
yoga,
going
beyond
Zen,
going
beyond
all
teachings.
’Vigyana’
means
consciousness,
and
’bhairava’
is
a
specific
term,
a
tantra
term
for
one
who
has
gone
beyond.
That
is
why
Shiva
is
known
as
Bhairava
and
Devi
is
known
as
Bhairavi
–
those
who
have
gone
beyond
the
dualities.
Source:
"Book of Secrets" - Osho
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