Now there’s human living
for you. That’s what life is all about. That can only come from awareness. And
in awareness you will understand that honor doesn’t mean a thing. It’s a social
convention, that’s all. That’s why the mystics and the prophets didn’t bother
one bit about it. Honor or disgrace meant nothing to them. They were living in
another world, in the world of the awakened. Success or failure meant nothing
to them. They had the attitude: “I’m an ass, you’re an ass, so where’s the
problem?”
Someone once said, “The three most difficult things for a
human being are not
physical feats or intellectual
achievements. They are, first, returning love for hate; second, including the
excluded; third, admitting that you are wrong.” But these are the easiest
things in the world if you haven’t identified with the “me.” You can say things
like “I’m wrong! If you knew me better, you’d see how often I’m wrong. What
would you expect from an ass?” But if I haven’t identified with these aspects
of “me,” you can’t hurt me. Initially, the old conditioning will kick in and
you’ll be depressed and anxious. You’ll grieve, cry, and so on. “Before
enlightenment, I used to be depressed: after enlightenment, I continue to be
depressed.” But there’s a difference: I don’t identify with it anymore. Do you
know what a big difference that is?
You step outside of yourself and look at that depression,
and don’t identify with it. You don’t do a thing to make it go away; you are
perfectly willing to go on with your life while it passes through you and
disappears. If you don’t know what that means, you really have something to look
forward to. And anxiety? There it comes and you’re not troubled. How strange!
You’re anxious but you’re not troubled.
Isn’t that a paradox? And you’re willing to let this
cloud come in, because the more you fight it, the more power you give it.
You’re willing to observe it as it passes by. You can be happy in your anxiety.
Isn’t that crazy? You can be happy in your depression. But you can’t have the
wrong notion of happiness. Did you think happiness was excitement or thrills?
That’s what causes the depression. Didn’t anyone tell you that? You’re
thrilled, all right, but you’re just preparing the way for your next
depression. You’re thrilled but you pick up the anxiety behind that: How can I
make it last? That’s not happiness, that’s addiction.
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