I would very much like
if two, three, or four
would get up and tell me
what exactly they want
out of this seminar.
I rather expected this.
So, my teaching is really based
on three very simple assumptions.
The first assumption is
that the totality
of manifestation
has come from the Source.
The Source is only One.
So, in creating
the manifestation,
the Source could not
possibly have taken
any other material
from anywhere
to produce
the manifestation.
So it must have
been produced
out of Itself.
So, strictly therefore,
if the Source has
produced the manifestation,
if the Consciousness
unmanifest
has become manifested,
if the potential energy
has become activized,
they are not two.
It is the same Consciousness
which was unmanifest
has become manifest.
Which is precisely
what Buddha meant
when he said:
Nirvana and Samsara
are one, not two.
Nirvana in action
is Samsara.
When Samsara
is not in action
it is Nirvana.
They are not two.
Basically, that is the point.
They are not two.
And the human being
is part of that manifestation.
And what is the manifestation?
Totality of objects.
The totality of manifestation
is the totality of objects.
Which means,
according to me,
the human being
is an object.
The rock is an object,
the animal is an object.
the human being
is an object
with different
characteristics.
The rock has no senses,
therefore the rock
does not need sensions
or consciousness
for the senses to work.
The animal has senses,
therefore it has sensions
which enables
the senses to work.
But both the rock
and the animal
are objects in the totality
of objects in the manifestation.
The human being,
similarly,
is an object,
like the rock or the animal,
with the same sensions
as the animal has,
which enables
the human being
to live his life
and for the senses to work.
The second thing
that my assumption is based on
is the statement of
Lord Buddha.
"In life, events happen,
deeds are done,
but there is no individual
doer thereof".
The events and the deeds
are actions which happen
through any body-mind
organisms
or all body-mind
organisms
together constitute
the functioning
of that manifestation.
There is no individual
doer thereof.
That is precisely
what Lord Krishna meant,
which is my third
assumption.
Lord Krishna,
in the Bhagavad Gita, says:
"You cannot commit a sin,
you cannot commit
a meritorious deed,
you think in terms of sins
and meritorious deeds
because your knowledge
of your true nature
is clouded or enveloped
by ignorance."
The word used is
"ignorance".
And the ignorance
that is referred to
in the Bhagavad Gita
is what we in modern times
use as the word "ego",
which is the basic problem
of the seeking.
Most teachings
start with
the basic that it is your ego
which is the cause
of all your suffering.
It is the ego which is
the cause of your suffering.
Therefore, you must
kill the ego.
And in order to kill
the ego,
various prescriptions
are given.
So my question
therefore is:
if the human being
is merely a created object
which is part of
the totality of manifestation,
where did this sense
of individuality,
this ego, which is
supposed to be destroyed,
where did it come from?
Where could it have come from
except from the Source.
So, my concept is
that it is the same Source
which created the rock
and the animal
with sensions,
and the human being
with sensions and intellect
which created the ego.
In fact, my concept is
that the thinking mind,
the intellect, the "me",
and the ego are names
for the same thing.
The intellect which considers
oneself as an individual
with a sense of personal doership
"I" do things, which is the ego.
So the "me"
to whom a prescription is given
to kill the ego
is the same thing.
I repeat:
you, to whom the prescriptions
are given,
to kill the ego
are not two.
So how can the ego
kill itself?
The ego cannot kill itself.
Therefore, my basic concept is
that only that power,
the Source,
which created the ego
can remove the ego
and that is precisely
what the source is doing.