OSHO, WHY DON'T YOU GIVE YOUR DISCIPLES A CERTAIN MODE OF
CONDUCT? ISN'T A MORAL CHARACTER NECESSARY FOR A SPIRITUAL
LIFE?
Mahendra Singh,
MY WHOLE EFFORT is to give you a consciousness, not a character. Consciousness is
the real thing, character the false entity. Character is needed by those who don't have
consciousness. If you have eyes, you don't need a walking-stick to find your way, to
grope your way. If you can see you don't ask others, "Where is the doer?" Character is
needed because people are unconscious. Character is just a lubricant; it helps you to run
George Gurdjieff used to say character is like a buffet. Buffers are used in railway trains;
between two compartments there are buffers. If something happens, those two
compartments cannot clash with each other; these buffers prevent them from clashing
with each other. Or it is like springs: cars have springs so you can move smoothly -- even
on an Indian road. Those springs go on absorbing the shocks; they are called shock
absorbers.
That's what character is: it is a shock absorber. People are told to be humble. If you learn
how to be humble it is a shock absorber. By learning how to be humble you will be able
to protect yourself against other people's egos. They will not hurt you so much; you are a
humble man. If you are egoistic you are bound to be hurt again and again. The ego is very
sensitive, so you cover up your ego with a blanket of humbleness. It helps, it gives you a
kind of smoothness, but it does not transform you.
My work consists of transformation. This is an alchemical school: I want to transform
you from unconsciousness into consciousness, from darkness into light. I cannot give you
a character; I can only give you insight, awareness. I would like you to live moment-to -moment,
not according to a set pattern given by me or given by the society, the church,
the state. I would like you to live according to your own small light of awareness,
according to your own consciousness. Be responsive to each moment.
Character means you have a certain ready-made answer for all the questions of life, so
whenever a situation arises you respond according to the set pattern. Because you
respond according to the ready-made answer. it is not a true response, it is only a reaction.
The man of character reacts, the man of consciousness responds: he takes the situation in,
he reflects the reality as it is, and out of that reflection he acts. The man of character
reacts, the man of consciousness acts. The man of character is mechanical; robotlike he
functions. He has a computer in his mind, full of information; ask him anything and a
ready-made answer rolls down from his computer.
A man of consciousness simply acts in the moment, not out of the past and out of the
memory. His response has a beauty, a naturalness, and his response is true to the
situation. The man of character always falls short, because life is continuously changing;
it is never the same. And your answers are always the same, they never grow -- they can't
grow, they are dead.
You have been told a certain thing in your childhood; it has remained there. You have
grown, life has changed, but that answer that was given by your parents or by your
teachers or by your priests is still there. And if something happens you will function
according to that answer which was given to you fifty years before. And in fifty years so
much water has gone down the Ganges; it is a totally different life.
Heraclitus says: You cannot step in the same river twice. And I say to you: You cannot
step in the same river even once, the river is so fast-flowing.
Character is stagnant; it is a dirty pool of water. Consciousness is a river.
Mahendra Singh, that's why I don't give my people ANY code of conduct. I give them
eyes to see, a consciousness to reflect, a mirrorlike being to be able to respond to any
situation that arises. I don't give them detailed information about what to do and what not
to do; I don't give them ten commandments. And if you start giving them commandments
then you cannot stop at ten, because life is far more complex.
In Buddhist scriptures there are thirty-three thousand rules for a Buddhist monk. Thirtythree
thousand rules! For every possible situation that may ever arise, they have given a
ready-made answer. But how are you going to remember thirty-three thousand rules of
conduct? And a man who is cunning enough to remember thirty-three thousand rules of
conduct will be clever enough to find a way out always; if he does not want to do a
certain thing he will find a way out. If he wants to do a certain thing he will find a way
out.
I have heard about a Christian saint: somebody hit him on his face, because just that day
in his morning discourse he had said, "Jesus says if somebody slaps you on one cheek,
give him the other." And the man wanted to try it, so he hit him, really hit him hard on
one cheek. And the saint was really true, true to his word: he gave him the other cheek.
But that man was also something: he hit even harder on the other cheek. Then he was
surprised: the saint jumped on the man, started beating him so hard that the man said,
"What are you doing? You are a saint, and just this morning you were saying that if
somebody hits you on one cheek, give him the other."
He said, "Yes -- but I don't have a third cheek. And Jesus stops there. Now I am free; now
I will do what I want to do. Jesus has no more information about it."
It happened exactly like that in Jesus' life also. Once he told a disciple, "Forgive seven
times." The disciple said, "Okay." The way he said, "Okay," Jesus became suspicious; he
said, "Seventy-seven times I say."
The disciple was a little disturbed, but he said, "Okay -- because numbers don't end at
seventy-seven. What about seventy-eight? Then I am free, then I can do what I want to
do!"
How many rules can you make for people? It is stupid, meaningless. That's how people
are religious, and still they are not religious: they always find a way to get out of those
rules of conduct and commandments. They can always find a way through the back door.
And character can at the most give you only a skin-deep, pseudo mask -- not even skindeep:
just scratch your saints a little bit and you will find the animal hidden behind. On
the surface they look beautiful, but only on the surface.
I don't want you to be superficial; I want you to REALLY change. But a real change
happens through the center of your being, not through the circumference. Character is
painting the circumference, consciousness is transformation of the center.

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