|
Gautam
Buddha
Enlightenment
Osho :
I
would
like
to
tell
you...
Buddha
tried
for
six
years
continuously
to
know
what
the
divine
is,
and
it
cannot
be
said
that
he
left
anything
undone.
He
did
everything
that
is
humanly
possible,
even
some
things
which
seem
humanly
impossible.
He
did
everything.
Whatever
was
known
up
to
his
day
he
practiced.
Whatever
methods
were
taught
to
him,
he
became
a
master
of
them.
He
went
to
all
the
gurus
that
existed
in
his
time,
to
everyone.
And
whatever
they
could
teach,
he
learned,
he
practiced.
And
then
he
said,
"Anything
more,
Sir?"
And
the
guru
said,
"Now
you
can
go,
because
all
that
I
could
give
you
I
have
given,
and
I
cannot
say,
as
I
say
in
other
cases,
that
you
have
not
practiced.
You
have
practiced.
This
is
all
that
I
can
give."
Buddha
said,
"I
have
not
known
the
divine
yet."
With
each
guru
this
happened.
Then
he
left
all
the
gurus.
Then
he
invented
his
own
methods.
Continuously,
for
six
years,
he
was
in
a
struggle
of
life
and
death.
He
did
everything
that
could
be
done.
Then,
at
last,
he
was
so
tired
of
doing,
so
deadly
tired,
that
one
day
when
he
was
taking
his
evening
bath
in
the
Niranjana
River
near
Bodhgaya,
he
felt
so
weak
and
so
tired
that
he
could
not
come
out
of
the
river.
He
just
clung
to
a
root
of
a
tree
and
a
thought
came
to
his
mind,
"I
have
become
so
weak,
I
cannot
even
cross
this
small
river.
How
will
I
be
alive
to
cross
the
whole
ocean
of
the
world?
I
have
done
everything,
and
I
have
not
found
the
divine.
I
have
only
tired
my
body."
He
felt
that
he
was
on
the
verge
of
death.
At
that
very
moment
he
felt
that
he
had
done
everything,
and
now
there
was
nothing
to
do.
He
relaxed,
and
new
energy
came
upon
him
because
of
his
relaxation.
All
that
was
suppressed
through
those
six
years
flowered.
He
came
out
of
the
river,
he
felt
just
like
a
feather,
a
bird's
feather
--
weightless.
He
relaxed
under
a Bodhi
tree.
It
was
a
bright
fullmoon
night.
Someone
came
--
a
girl,
a
shudra
girl
named
Sujata.
The
name
shows
that
the
girl
must
have
been
a
shudra
because
to
have
the
name
Sujata
means
she
has
not
come
from
a
higher
caste.
Sujata
means
wellborn.
She
had
promised
the
Bodhi
tree
to
pay
it
some
homage
daily,
so
she
has
come
with
some
sweets.
Buddha
is
there
--
tired,
pale,
bloodless,
but
relaxed,
absolutely
unburdened
--
and
it
is
a
fullmoon
night
with
nobody
around.
The
girl,
Sujata,
felt
that
the
deity
of
the
tree
had
come
to
receive
her
homage.
Had
it
been
another
day,
Buddha
could
have
refused.
He
would
not
rest
in
the
night,
he
would
not
eat
any
food.
But
today
he
was
totally
relaxed.
He
took
the
food,
and
he
slept.
This
was
the
first
night
after
six
years
that
he
really
slept.
He
was
relaxed
with
nothing
to
do.
Then
there
was
no
worry.
There
was
no
tomorrow
even,
because
tomorrow
exists
only
because
one
has
to
do
something.
If
one
has
not
to
do
anything,
then
there
is
no
tomorrow.
Then
the
moment
is
enough.
Buddha
slept,
and
in
the
morning,
at
five
o'clock,
when
the
last
star
was
withering
away,
he
was
out
of
the
sleep.
He
saw
the
last
star
disappearing,
with
no
mind,
because
when
you
have
nothing
to
do
there
is
no
mind.
The
mind
is
just
a
faculty
for
doing
something,
a
technical
faculty.
No
mind,
nothing
to
do,
no
effort
on
his
part,
indifferent
to
whether
he
was
alive
or
dead,
he
just
opened
his
eyes,
and
he
began
to
dance.
He
had
come
to
that
knowing
to
which
he
could
not
come
through
so
many
efforts.
Whenever
someone
would
ask
him
how
he
achieved,
he
would
say,
"The
more
I
tried
to
achieve,
the
more
I
was
at
a
loss.
I
could
not
achieve.
So
how
can
I
say
I
have
achieved?
The
more
I
tried,
the
more
I
was
involved.
I
could
not
achieve.
The
mind
was
trying
to
transcend
itself,
which
was
impossible.
It
is
just
like
trying
to
be
a
father
to
yourself,
just
trying
to
give
birth
to
yourself."
So
Buddha
would
say,
"I
cannot
say
I
achieved.
I
can
only
say
I
tried
so
much
that
I
was
annihilated.
I
tried
so
much
that
any
effort
became
absurd.
And
the
moment
came
when
I
was
not
trying,
when
the
mind
was
not,
when
I
was
not
thinking.
Then
there
was
no
future
because
there
was
no
past.
Both
were
always
together.
Past
is
behind,
future
is
in
front;
they
are
always
conjoined.
If
one
drops,
the
other
drops
simultaneously.
Then
there
was
no
future,
no
past,
no
mind.
I
was
mindless,
I
was
I-less.
Then
something
happened,
and
I
cannot
say
that
this
something
happened
in
that
moment.
I
can
only
say
that
this
was
always
happening,
only
I
was
not
aware.
It
was
always
happening,
only
I
was
closed.
So
I
cannot
say
I
have
achieved
something."
Buddha
said,
"I
can
only
say
I
have
lost
something
--
the
ego,
the
mind
--
I
have
not
achieved
anything
at
all.
Now
I
know
that
all
that
I
have
was
always
there.
It
was
in
every
layer,
it
was
in
every
stone,
in
every
flower,
but
now
I
recognize
it
was
always
so.
Only
I
was
blind.
So
I
have
lost
my
blindness;
I
have
not
achieved
anything,
I
have
lost
something."
If
you
begin
with
the
divine,
then
you
begin
to
achieve.
If
you
begin
with
yourself,
then
you
begin
to
lose.
Things
will
begin
to
disappear,
and
ultimately
you
will
disappear.
And
when
you
are
not,
the
divine
is
--
with
all
its
grace,
with
all
its
love,
with
all
its
compassion,
but
only
when
you
are
not.
Your
nonexistence
is
the
categorical
condition.
For
no
one
can
it
be
relaxed.
It
is
categorical,
it
is
the
absolute.
You
are
the
barrier.
Fall
down,
and
then
you
know.
And
only
when
you
know,
you
know.
You
cannot
understand
it,
I
cannot
explain
it
to
you.
I
cannot
make
you
understand
it.
So
whatever
I
am
saying,
I
am
not
saying
anything
metaphysical.
I
am
only
trying
to
show
you
that
you
must
begin
with
yourself.
If
you
begin
with
yourself,
you
will
end
with
the
divine,
because
that
is
your
other
part,
the
other
pole.
But
begin
from
this
bank.
Do
not
begin
from
the
other,
where
you
are
not.
You
cannot
begin
from
there.
Begin
from
where
you
are,
and
the
more
you
will
go
deep,
the
less
you
will
be.
The
more
you
will
know
yourself,
the
less
a
self
you
will
be.
And
once
you
have
come
to
total
understanding
about
yourself,
you
will
be
annihilated,
you
will
go
into
nonexistence,
you
will
be
totally
negative
--
not.
And
in
that
not,
in
that
total
negation,
you
will
know
the
grace
which
is
always
falling,
which
is
always
raining
down
from
eternity.
You
will
know
the
love
which
is
always
around
you.
It
has
always
been,
but
you
have
not
paid
any
attention
to
it.
Be
annihilated,
and
you
will
be
aware
of
it.
Source:
“I
Am
the
Gate”
By
Osho
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