Osho on Inferiority Complex and Superiority Complex
Question - Is there really something like an Inferiority Complex?
Osho - Psychobabble! the
psychologists have taken the place of the theologist. The theologian is out of
date, the psychologist is in. And psychology has created great psychobabble,
great words, strange words, and when you can use great and strange words which
are really nothing but gibberish, you can impress people.
Do you know from where the word gibberish comes? It comes from
the name of a Sufi mystic, Jabbar. He used to talk nonsense, because he came to
understand that whatsoever you say is nonsense. Then why even pretend that it is
sense? Jabbar started really talking nonsense. He would use sounds, words...
nobody could follow what he was saying. Everybody was free to have his own
interpretation. The followers of Jabbar were many -- because when the master
cannot be understood, it is very easy for the disciples to follow him, because
then they can interpret.
For example, if you had asked Jabbar, "Do you believe in God?"
he would have said, "Hoo hoo!" Now, it is up to you to find out what "Hoo hoo!"
means. The very clever one will think it is the last part of Allah-hoo, that the
master has given only a hint, and so on, so forth.
Or he will do something absurd. You ask, "What is God?" and he
may stand on his head immediately. Now it is up to you to figure it out -- and
everybody is clever in figuring out things. Somebody will think he had given the
indication that everything is topsy-turvy, so whatsoever you have been thinking
up to now has to be put upside down. Some disciples even started reading the
scriptures backwards!
But one thing was good about it: Jabbar must have enjoyed the
whole show! He must have really enjoyed how many interpretations people can
find. The English word gibberish comes from Jabbar. Now the greatest gibberish
that is "in" is psychological. Freud really created a new language:
psychoanalysis is nothing but a new language. For small things, for things which
everybody understands, he will find such difficult words: "Oedipus complex" --
for a small thing, that every boy loves his mother. Now if you say every boy
loves his mother, nobody can think that you are very learned, but if you say,
"This boy suffers from an Oedipus complex," it sounds....
One Jewish lady was talking to the neighbor, and she said, "The
psychoanalyst who is treating my son has said that my son suffers from an
Oedipus complex."
And the neighbor lady said, "Oedipus schmoedipus! Doesn't
matter as long as he is a good boy and loves his mother!"
Now, this word inferiority complex.... There is nothing like
inferiority complex, all that is there is the phenomenon of the ego.
And because of the phenomenon of the ego, two things are possible. If you are
egoistic you are bound to compare yourself with others. The ego cannot exist
without comparison, hence if you really want to drop the ego, drop comparing.
You will be surprised: where has the ego gone? Compare, and it is there; and it
is there only in comparison. It is not an actuality, it is a fiction created out
of comparison.
For example, you are passing through a garden and you come
across a very big tree. Compare: the tree is so big, suddenly you are so small.
If you don't compare, you enjoy the tree, there is no problem at all. The tree
is big -- so what! So let it be big, you are not a tree. And there are other
trees also which are not so big, but they are not suffering from any inferiority
complex. I have never come across a tree which suffers from inferiority complex
or from superiority complex. Even the highest tree, a Lebanon cedar, even that
tree does not suffer from superiority complex, because comparison does not
exist.
Man creates comparison because ego is possible only if nourished
by comparison continuously. But then you will have two outcomes: sometimes you
will feel superior, and sometimes you will feel inferior. And the possibility of
feeling inferior is greater than the possibility of feeling superior, because
there are millions of people: somebody is more beautiful than you, somebody is
taller than you, somebody is stronger than you, somebody seems to be more
intelligent than you, somebody is more learned than you, somebody is more
successful, somebody is more famous, somebody is this, somebody is that. If you
just go on comparing, millions of people... you will gather a great inferiority
complex. But it doesn't exist, it is your creation.
Those who are more mad, they suffer from a superiority complex.
They are so mad that when they compare they cannot see that there are millions
of people who are different in many ways and superior in many ways. They are so
obsessed with the ego that they remain closed to anything that is superior; they
always look at the inferior. It is said that people like to meet people who are
in some way inferior to them; it gives them great nourishment. People like
people who support their ego.
The more mad person will suffer from a superiority complex,
because he will always choose those things which make him feel superior. But he
knows that he is playing a trick. How can he deceive himself? He knows that he
has chosen only those points which make him feel superior; he knows what he has
not chosen -- that is there on the margin, he is perfectly aware of it. So his
superiority complex is always shaking: it is made on sand, the house can
collapse any moment. He suffers from anxiety because he has made a house on the
sand.
Jesus says: Don't make your house on the sand; find a rock. The
more sane person will suffer from an inferiority complex, because he will look
all around, will be available to all that is happening all around, and will
start collecting ideas that he is inferior. But both are shadows of the ego, two
sides of the ego. The superior person deep down carries the inferiority complex,
and the person who suffers from inferiority complex deep down carries a
superiority complex; he wants to be superior.
I have heard -- I don't
know how far it is correct -- that Morarji Desai asked a psychoanalyst -- of
course in privacy -- "Why do I suffer from an inferiority complex?"
The
psychoanalyst went into deep analysis: days and days with Morarji Desai lying on
his couch free associating. And then one day, bouncing with joy, the
psychoanalyst declared, "Sir, I certify that you don't suffer from inferiority
complex, you need not be worried about it."
And Morarji Desai was also happy. He said, "But I had always
thought that I suffer, and now you say I don't suffer. You must be right, but
can you give me the explanation as to how you say so so confidently?"
And the
psychoanalyst said, "Sir, you don't suffer from inferiority complex -- you are
simply inferior!"
Except politicians, I don't think anybody is inferior.
I make an exception for politicians. In fact, if somebody does not suffer from
an inferiority complex he will not go into politics at all. Politics is the
arena for those who suffer from an inferiority complex, because they want to
prove to themselves and to the world that they are not inferior: Look, I have
become the prime minister, or the president! Now who can say I am inferior? I
have proved that I am not inferior. Politics attracts the people who are very
egoistic and suffer from inferiority complex.
Artists are just on the other polarity: they suffer from
superiority complex. They know they are creators, they know that they have come
with a special quality to create something in the world. Politicians suffer from
an inferiority complex, and try to reach to higher and higher power posts to
prove to themselves and to others that it is not so. Artists suffer from
superiority complex; that's why artists constantly quarrel amongst themselves.
No artist ever agrees that another artist has contributed anything to the world.
They are continuously criticizing each other; they cannot be friends, they are
all superior people!
The mystic is the one who has come to see the whole stupidity of
it, the whole game of the ego. And these are the three worlds available: the
world of the politician -- the world of power politics -- the world of the
artist, or the world of the mystic. The mystic is one who has seen that all
comparison is false, meaningless: he has dropped comparing. The moment you drop
comparing, you are simply yourself -- neither superior nor inferior. How can you
be superior or inferior if you are just yourself?
Just think: the Third World War has happened and everybody else
has disappeared from the world, and only Anand Bashir, who has asked this
question, is left. The whole world is suddenly gone, only Bashir is left,
sitting in Koregaon Park, Poona. Will you be superior or inferior? You will be
simply yourself, because there will be nobody to compare with.
A mystic is the one who simply knows that he is himself. He
lives his life according to his own light, he creates his own space, he has his
own being. He is utterly contented with himself, because without comparison you
cannot be discontented either. And he is not an egoist, he cannot be -- ego
needs comparison, ego feeds on comparison. He is simply doing his thing. The
rose is a rose and the lotus is a lotus, and some tree is very high and some
other tree is very small -- but everything is as it is. Just try to see for a
single moment without comparing, and then where is superiority and where is
inferiority? And where is the ego, the source of it all?
Source - Osho Book "The Book of Wisdom"
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