Osho on Buddha Vipassana Meditation Technique
Osho - Buddha's way was VIPASSANA --
vipassana means witnessing. And he found one of the greatest devices ever: the
device of watching your breath, just watching your breath. Breathing is such a
simple and natural phenomenon and it is there twenty-four hours a day. You need
not make any effort. If you repeat a mantra then you will have to make an
effort, you will have to force yourself. If you say, "Ram, Ram, Ram," you will
have to continuously strain yourself. And you are bound to forget many times.
Moreover, the word 'Ram' is again something of the mind, and anything of the
mind can never lead you beyond the mind.
Buddha discovered a totally different angle:
just watch your breath -- the breath coming in, the breath going out. There are
four points to be watched. Sitting silently just start seeing the breath,
feeling the breath. The breath going in is the first point. Then for a moment
when the breath is in it stops -- a very small moment it is -- for a split
second it stops; that is the second point to watch. Then the breath turns and
goes out; this is the third point to watch. Then again when the breath is
completely out, for a split second it stops; that is the fourth point to watch.
Then the breath starts coming in again... this is the circle of
breath.
If you can watch all these four points you will
be surprised, amazed at the miracle of such a simple process -- because mind is
not involved. Watching is not a quality of the mind; watching is the quality of
the soul, of consciousness; watching is not a mental process at all. When you
watch, the mind stops, ceases to be. Yes, in the beginning many times you will
forget and the mind will come in and start playing its old games. But whenever
you remember that you had forgotten, there is no need to feel repentant, guilty
-- just go back to watching, again and again go back to watching your breath.
Slowly slowly, less and less mind interferes.
And when you can watch your breath for
forty-eight minutes as a continuum, you will become enlightened. You will be
surprised -- just forty-eight minutes -- because you will think that it is not
very difficult... just forty-eight minutes! It it is very difficult. Forty-eight
seconds and you will have fallen victim to the mind many times. Try it with a
watch in front of you; in the beginning you cannot be watchful for sixty
seconds. In just sixty seconds, that is one minute, you will fall asleep many
times, you will forget all about watching -- the watch and the watching will
both be forgotten.
Some idea will take you far far away; then
suddenly you will realize... you will look at the watch and ten seconds have
passed. For ten seconds you were not watching. But slowly slowly -- it is a
knack; it is not a practice, it is a knack -- slowly slowly you imbibe it,
because those few moments when you are watchful are of such exquisite beauty, of
such tremendous joy, of such incredible ecstasy, that once you have tasted those
few moments you would like to come back again and again -- not for any other
motive, just for the sheer joy of being there, present to the breath.
Remember, it is not the same process as is done
in yoga. In yoga the process is called PRANAYAM; it is a totally different
process, in fact just the opposite of what Buddha calls vipassana. In pranayam
you take deep breaths, you fill your chest with more and more air, more and more
oxygen; then you empty your chest as totally as possible of all carbon dioxide.
It is a physical exercise -- good for the body but it has nothing to do with
vipassana. In vipassana you are not to change the rhythm of your natural breath,
you are not to take long, deep breaths, you are not to exhale in any way
differently than you ordinarily do. Let it be absolutely normal and natural.
Your whole consciousness has to be on one point; watching.
And if you can watch your breath then you can
start watching other things too. Walking you can watch that you are walking,
eating you can watch that you are eating, and ultimately, finally, you can watch
that you are sleeping. The day you can watch that you are sleeping you are
transported into another world. The body goes on sleeping and inside a light
goes on burning brightly. Your watchfulness remains undisturbed, then
twenty-four hours a day there is an undercurrent of watching. You go on doing
things... for the outside world nothing has changed, but for you everything has
changed.
Source: from Osho Book “Dhammapada Vol
5”
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