– again, remember, it is no-mind,

Because searching one’s own Mind leads ultimately to enlightenment

– not mind. Mind has to be dropped long before. You have to search into no-mind, into that silent space where you will meet yourself, your buddha.

Because searching one’s own no-mind leads ultimately to enlightenment,

this practice is a prerequisite to becoming a buddha.

It is not a prerequisite to becoming a buddha, it is a prerequisite to discovering the buddha. These are small differences of words but they show that the moment you talk about becoming, you are talking about a process of change. Becoming is change, but the moment you talk about being, you are talking about is-ness. There is no change. The buddha is your being, not your becoming. But I can understand Basui’s difficulty; he is saying right things but in the wrong words.

I hope he will do a little more homework.

Jakuan wrote:

Perfect melody – like wind
among the pines of far-off slopes.
Mind is washed sky clean:
hear it beyond itself.

A master, in this simple statement, says the whole scripture: Perfect melody – like wind among the pines of far-off slopes. Mind is washed sky clean: hear it beyond itself.

Another Zen expression:

Better to see the face
than to hear the name.

You have heard too much about the buddha, now it is time to see the face.

Anando has asked:

Osho,
Last night I heard you refer to Zen as “the great love affair.” yet, rarely are love or compassion mentioned in Zen anecdotes or discourses of the masters. Why is this?


From Osho, The Original Man, Chapter 7

www.osho.com

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