![]() Tao: The Pathless Path also features a Q&A section that addresses how Taoist understanding applies to everyday life in concrete, practical terms. “Best Be Still, Best Be Empty” discusses the difference between the path of the will, the via affirmitiva of Christianity, Judaism, and Islam, versus the path of the mystic, the via negativa of Buddha and Lao Tzu. “No Rest for the Living” uses a dialogue between a despondent seeker and his master to reveal the limits of philosophy and the crippling consequences of living for the sake of some future goal. “No Regrets” is a parable about the difference between the knowledge that is gathered from the outside and the “knowing” that arises from within. ![]() “A Man Who Knows How to Console Himself” looks beneath the apparent cheerfulness of a wandering monk and asks if there is really a happiness that endures through life’s ups and downs. Reading this book with an open heart and mind helped me to establish a connection and relationship with DIVINE EXISTENCE ( THE TAO) which is the most valuable, joyful and blissful thing that has ever happened to me in my life. “Who Is Really Happy” uses the discovery of a human skull on the roadside to probe into the question of immortality and how misery arises out of the existence of the ego. OSHO was a SPIRITUAL MASTER, and a true TAOIST MASTER. Leih Tzu was a well-known Taoist master in the fourth century B.C., and his sly critiques of a Confucius provide abundant opportunities for the reader to explore the contrasts between the rational and irrational, the male and female, the structured and the spontaneous. Even if you want to throw it out you cannot that is real knowledge.In Tao: The Pathless Path, Osho, one of the greatest spiritual teachers of the twentieth century, comments on five parables from the Leih Tzu, bringing a fresh and contemporary interpretation to the ancient wisdom of Tao. There is no need to hold it, it is simply there. Another is that which you don′t remember but is simply there – is there not as a memory but as part of your being. One is that which you have to remember but you go on forgetting again and again. "Watch in life – and you will find two categories, different categories. Even if you make an effort to forget it you will fail you cannot forget it. That which I call know-ledge is that which cannot be forgotten. All that is real becomes part of you it remains available forever and ever. You may not have been to a river for fifty years but you cannot forget it because it has never been remembered, it has gone into your being, it has become part of you. "There are a few things you cannot forget for example, swimming. That which is remembered will be forgotten: that which is not remembered cannot be forgotten, there is no way to forget it. But real knowledge is never forgotten because real knowledge is never remembered. Even the professors who teach in the universities will all fail if they are examined again because the examination was just a momentary effort. "Can’t you observe it in your own life? How much do you remember of that which you crammed in your university days how much? If you are examined again you will all fail. Once the examination is finished he will lose that hold and things will disappear. He was keeping it, holding it, for the examination. Somehow it was just managed, with very great tension and strain. "When a student goes to an examination he remembers a thousand and one things, but after three months, if you ask him, ninety-nine per cent of it has gone down the drain. Even though kindle estimates that I should be done with the book by 2.5 hours, it’s almost impossible to. The unreal knowledge is that which you have crammed and has not become a part of you. Over the past few weeks, I’ve been slow-reading Paul Millerd’s book, Pathless Path. In fact that which becomes part of you is real knowledge and you need not cram it. Once you have vibrated with it, something of it will have penetrated into your being, will become part of you. You should not be worried about whether you will be able to remember it or not – that is not the point at all. In Tao: The Pathless Path, Osho, one of the greatest spiritual teachers of the twentieth century. TAO The Empty Boat The Secret of Secrets Tao : The Golden Gate Tao : The Pathless Path Tao : The Three Treasures When the Shoe Fits YOGA Yoga : The Alpha. I am singing a song to you, let this song reach and vibrate in you. Buy a cheap copy of Tao: The Pathless Path book by Osho. ![]() ![]() So when I say 'listen' the first step – it means: simply be relaxed, open, available. In a tense mind meditation is not possible. "When I say 'listen' I don′t mean concentrate, because if you concentrate you will become very tense. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |