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Osho Quotes on
No-Mind
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To be aflame with silence,
with joy, is wisdom. It is not through logic but
through love. It is not through words but
through a wordless state called meditation or a
state of no-mind, satori, samadhi.
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Only no-mind can be without
any duality, because it is empty. The no-mind is
choicelessness. The no-mind is pure awareness.
It is just the empty sky.
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Samadhi means when sushupti,
dreamless sleep, becomes alert, awake. When you
are asleep as far as the body is concerned, you
are asleep as far as the mind is concerned,
because there is no disturbance of any dream,
there is no tension in the body -- but beyond
the mind, the no-mind is fully alert. He knows
that the mind is without any dreams, he sees it,
it is without any dreams, he sees it the body is
absolutely relaxed. And this seeing, this
alertness, continues twenty-four hours. Then
sushupti becomes samadhi.
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Remember the word
bodhichitta, because Atisha says the whole
effort of religion, the whole science of
religion, is nothing but an endeavor to create
bodhichitta, buddha-consciousness: a mind which
functions as a no-mind, a mind which dreams no
more, thinks no more, a mind which is just
awareness, pure awareness.
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Life can be lived in rules,
but then life becomes superficial. Live life not
according to the laws but according to
consciousness, awareness. Don't live life
according to the mind. Mind has rules and
regulations, mind has rituals. Live life from
the standpoint of no-mind so that you can bloom
into unpredictable flowers.
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In the East we call this
state meditation: no belief, no thought, no
desire, no prejudice, no conditioning -- in
fact, no mind at all. A state of no-mind is
meditation. When you can look without any mind
interfering, distorting, interpreting, then you
see the truth. The truth is already all around;
just you have to put your mind aside.
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Zen is the most scientific
method to inquire into your consciousness. It
takes you beyond mind into a space called
no-mind. No self, but pure awareness, and you
have a taste of eternity and immortality.
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One of the names of Buddha
is TATHAGATA -- one who lives in suchness, one
who has become free from all the distractions of
the mind. And the miracle is that the mind
consists only of distraction, so once you are
free of all distractions there is no mind left.
In the present there is no mind. In the present
there is only consciousness, awareness,
watchfulness.
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Awareness means to listen
to me unfocused -- alert of course, not fallen
asleep, but alert to these birds, their
chirping, alert to the wind that passes through
the trees, alert to everything that is
happening. Concentration excludes much, includes
little. Awareness excludes nothing, includes
all. Awareness is a state of no-mind. You are,
yet you are not focused. You are just a mirror
reflecting all, echoing all; see the beauty of
it and the silence and the stillness.
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Mind dissolves only when
you don't choose. And when there is no mind, you
are for the first time in your crystal clarity,
for the first time in your original freshness.
For the first time your real face is
encountered. Mind is not there -- the divider.
Now existence appears as one. Mind has dropped;
the barrier between you and existence is no
more. Now you can look at existence with no
mind. This is how a sage is born. With the mind
-- the world. With no mind -- freedom, MOKSHA,
KAIVALYA, NIRVANA. Cessation of the mind is
cessation of the world.
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When there is no thought.
no desire, no ambition, in that state of no-mind
truth descends in you -- or ascends in you. As
far as the dimension of truth is concerned both
are the same, because in the world of the
innermost subjectivity height and depth mean the
same. It is one dimension: the vertical
dimension. Mind moves horizontally, no-mind
exists vertically. The moment the mind ceases to
function -- that's what meditation is all about:
cessation of the mind, total cessation of the
mind -- your consciousness becomes vertical;
depth and height are yours.
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You can call it tathata,
suchness. 'Suchness' is a Buddhist way of
expressing that there is something in you which
always remains in its intrinsic nature, never
changing. It always remains in its selfsame
essence, eternally so. That is your real nature.
That which changes is not you, that is mind.
That which does not change in you is buddha-mind.
You can call it no-mind, you can call it samadhi,
satori. It depends upon you; you can give it
whatsoever name you want. You can call it christ-consciousness.
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Many times people ask me,
"What is sin and what is virtue? And how to
decide?" If you decide your decision will be
wrong. If you choose you will be wrong. All
choice is wrong. There is no way to decide.
There is no need to decide what is sin and what
is virtue. You only need a transparent mind, a
clarity, a thoughtless mind, a no-mind, a
mirror-like consciousness. In that consciousness
WHATSOEVER HAPPENS is virtue. In that
consciousness WHATSOEVER CANNOT HAPPEN is sin.
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Drop all beliefs, all
disbeliefs. Let the mind become less cluttered.
Remove all unnecessary luggage, become more
unburdened. The more unburdened you are, the
closer to truth. When you are absolutely
unburdened, empty, when you are just there, with
no idea surrounding you, truth happens. That is
what Zen people call satori. It happens in a
state of no-mind. And the beginning of no-mind
is the dropping, slowly slowly, of all kinds of
prejudices -- Christian, Hindu, Mohammedan;
these are all prejudices. Communist, Catholic...
these are all prejudices. And to cling to these
prejudices is a very very irreverent act, very
egoistic, because these beliefs are claims, and
claims without any validity. You don't have any
existential validity for them -- you simply
believe because you have been told to believe.
You believe out of fear or you believe out of a
certain conditioning; because it was a
coincidence that you were born a Buddhist or a
Christian and you were taught Christianity or
Buddhism. And your mind has been fed with
information from the Bible or the Koran and now
you are repeating it.
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By thinking you cannot
decide. It is not a question of deciding as a
logical conclusion, it is a question of
choiceless awareness. You need a mind without
thoughts. In other words, you need a no-mind,
just a pure silence, so you can see directly
into things. And out of that clarity will come
the choice on its own; you are not choosing. You
will act just as a buddha acts. Your action will
have beauty, your action will have truth, your
action will have the fragrance of the divine.
There is no need for you to choose.
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