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"You can never go beyond the mind if you go on using it. You have to take a jump, and meditation means that jump. That's why meditation is illogical, irrational. And it cannot be made logical; it cannot be reduced to reason. You have to experience it. If you experience, only then do you know. "So try this: don't think about it, try – try to be a witness to your own thoughts. Sit down, relaxed,
close your eyes, let your thoughts run just like pictures
run on a screen. See them, look at them, make them your
objects. One thought arises: look at it deeply. don't think
about it, just look at it. If you begin to think about it
then you are not a witness –
you have fallen in a trap. "Religion and science are poles
apart, but in one thing they are similar and their emphasis
is the same: science depends on experiment, and religion
also. Only philosophy depends just on thinking. Religion and
science both depend on experiment: science on objects,
religion on subjectivity. Science depends on experimenting
with other things than you, and religion depends on
experimenting directly with you. "Don't go on thinking. Begin, start somewhere, to experiment. Then you will have a direct feeling of what thinking is and what witnessing is. And then you will come to know that you cannot do both simultaneously, just as you cannot run and sit simultaneously. If you run, then you cannot sit, then you are not sitting. And if you are sitting, then you cannot run. But sitting is not a function of the legs. Running is a function of legs. Rather, sitting is non-function of the legs. When the legs are functioning, then you are not sitting. Sitting is a non-function of the legs: running is the function. "The same is with the mind:
thinking is a function of the mind; witnessing is a
non-function of the mind. When the mind is not functioning,
you have the witnessing, then you have the awareness."
Osho, The Ultimate Alchemy, Vol. 1, Talk #16 To continue reading – and see all the available formats of this talk: click here
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