Truth Is Always Very Simple

Individual Talk

From:The Dhammapada: The Way of the Buddha, Vol. 04

In stock
Osho,
What does enlightenment feel like?

"Enlightenment is not a thought nor a feeling. In fact, enlightenment is not an experience at all. When all experiences have disappeared and the mirror of consciousness..."
Truth Is Always Very Simple
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Osho,
What does enlightenment feel like?

"Enlightenment is not a thought nor a feeling. In fact, enlightenment is not an experience at all. When all experiences have disappeared and the mirror of consciousness..."

Osho continues:
"And there is no sound, there is no noise. It is not the experience of one, because what can 'one' mean when only one is left? One can have meaning only in comparison with the other, with many. It is not light because it is not darkness. It is not sweet because it is not bitter.

"No human word is adequate to express it, because all human words are rooted in dualityand enlightenment is a transcendence; all duality left behind.

"That's why Buddha says it is shunya. When he says it is shunya, void, emptiness, he does not mean that it is emptiness; he simply means it is empty of all content.

"For example, a room can be called empty if all furniture has been removed, not a single thing is left inside – you will call the room empty. It is empty of all that it used to contain before, but it is also full – full of emptiness, full of roominess, full of itself. But nothing can be said about its fullness, its plenitude, because human language has no word for it. We have been trying for centuries to call it God, to call it nirvana, to call it moksha, but all words somehow fail.

"It is difficult to translate something from prose to poetry, more difficult to translate from poetry to prose, because prose is on a lower level, poetry is on a higher level. It is difficult to translate from one language to another language, although all languages exist on the same plane. Why is it difficult to translate? – because there are subtle nuances to words. Those nuances are lost in translating, and those are the real things.

"This is impossible: to translate something for which no word exists, to translate something that is transcendental into the languages which belong to the world of duality. It is like talking about light with a blind man; talking about beautiful music to one who cannot hear, who is deaf; talking to a person who is suffering from fever and whose taste is lost about 'sweet.' The taste of sweetness is meaningless; he has lost all taste. But a little bit is possible because he used to taste before; he can remember."
More Information
Publisher Osho International
Duration of Talk 104 mins
File Size 26.59 MB
Type Individual Talks