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GOOD, BAD, OR LUCKY
To me, selfishness seems to come out of an instinct for
self-preservation, which is our deepest and first instinct. How can we opt for
selflessness? It would be almost like opting for nonbeing. To me, it would seem
to be the same thing as nonbeing. Whatever it is, I’m saying: Stop feeling bad
about being selfish; we’re all the same. Someone once had a terribly beautiful
thing to say about Jesus. This person wasn’t even Christian. He said, “The
lovely thing about Jesus was that he was so at home with sinners, because he
understood that he wasn’t one bit better than they were.” We differ from
others—from criminals, for example—only in what we do or don’t do, not in
what we are. The only difference between Jesus and those others was that he
was awake and they weren’t. Look at people who win the lottery. Do they say,
“I’m so proud to accept this prize, not for myself, but for my nation and my
society.” Does anybody talk like that when they win the lottery? No. Because
they were lucky, lucky. So they won the lottery, first prize. Anything
to be proud of in that?
In the
same way, if you achieved enlightenment, you would do so in the interest of
self and you would be lucky. Do you want to glory in that? What’s there to
glory about? Can’t you see how utterly stupid it is to be vain about your good
deeds? The Pharisee wasn’t an evil man, he was a stupid man. He was stupid, not
evil. He didn’t stop to think. Someone once said, “I dare not stop to think,
because if I did, I wouldn’t know how to get started again.”
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