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ZEN: THE PATH OF PARADOX
VOL. 3
Chapter 6: Grace is Being Herenow
Question 4

Energy Enhancement Enlightened Texts Zen Paradox, Vol. 3
The fourth  question:
  Question 4
  WHAT DO YOU  THINK OF ETHICS -- LYING, CHEATING, STEALING, IDLE GOSSIP, BEGGING, TRYING TO  BUM OFF OTHERS WHO DO WORK? MOST RELIGIONS HAVE A CODE OF ETHICS FOR THE  BENEFIT OF ALL. DOES RIGHTEOUS CONDUCT HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH ENLIGHTENMENT?
  I THINK  "IF YOU DON'T WORK, YOU DON'T EAT" IS A VERY GOOD MOTTO.
  PLEASE  ENLIGHTEN ME.
THE FIRST  THING: Righteous conduct has nothing to do with enlightenment. Of course,  enlightenment has much to do with righteous conduct.
  You don't  go to enlightenment through righteous conduct; you come to righteous conduct  through enlightenment. Righteous conduct first and then enlightenment is  putting things upside down. It is putting the cart before the bullocks. The  inner must happen first! then the outer follows it like a shadow. Consciousness  must happen first, then conscience arises out of it naturally.
  If you do  it the other way round, you will miss. You will become a righteous person but  you will not be a right person. You will become very very righteous,  moralistic, puritanical, this and that -- but ALL this will be nothing but  decorations for your ego, new medals for the ego, new certificates for the ego.  You can become a saint by righteous conduct, but you cannot become a Buddha. You  can become a saint, but you cannot become a Christ -- and the difference is  tremendous. Try to understand it.
  Character  is imposed from the outside; it is a conditioning. It is a kind of enforced  slavery. You are not really free in it. You have to do certain things because  if you do them you are paid well. It brings a good payoff. If you don't do  those things, you suffer, you lose respect, you lose respectability. You become  a criminal.
  A cunning  person, a clever person, would not like to lose respect in the society; so all  those who are clever and cunning, they will become righteous. Naturally, they  will have double-binds in their minds; they will not be one piece. on the  surface they will show that they are righteous, and from the backdoor they will  go on doing all that they always wanted to. They will have two faces, at least.  One face, the public face, to show to others; another, the private face, to  live with. They will be hypocrites.
  Imposed  character brings hypocrisy in the world. Imposed character brings a split in  people; they become schizophrenic. They do something and they say something  else, and they pretend something else still. Their life loses grace because  they are not one; their life loses harmony. There is no accord, there is  constant discord.
  So your  so-called religions, which have insisted too much on the moral code, have not  been able to make a better world. They have been able only to create a  hypocritical world, a very ugly world. You can see it, there is no need to say  it. You can see it all around -- a very ugly world, very false, pseudo,  pretentious.
  And the man  who pretends... and he cannot do anything else -- unless he has attained to  inner consciousness, he can only pretend; he cannot do anything else. All that  he is trying to do he will have to follow -- Moses' commandments he will  follow, Jesus' commandments he will follow, or Buddha's commandments. But they  are not his own experience. He has not experienced that way himself. All his  morality is borrowed from others. He is an imitator, it is not authentic.
  That which  has not arisen in your own consciousness is never going to make you free; you  will be imprisoned. And you will ht so much entangled in all that split that it  will be difficult ever to feel happy.
  Now see  what happens. Your morality says one thing. For example, the morality says:  "Stick to your woman. If you are married, stick to your woman, love her,  be responsible." Perfectly okay. If you LOVE her, there is no need to say  'stick to her' -- you will stick anyway. But if you don't love her, then the  problem arises. If the love has disappeared... and love disappears; in this  life nothing is permanent. I'm not saying that in the first place there was no  love -- there may have been but now it has disappeared. As it has entered one  day, it has gone one day. Now what to do?
  If you  stick to your righteousness, to all the codes and the rules that have been  given to you, you will be untrue to yourself, untrue to the woman. You will go  on making gestures to her as if you love her. And deep down you will be very  very angry, raging. Deep down you would like to kill this woman. You feel at  least that if she dies it will be good, it will be a blessing. Something... you  will be waiting for some disaster to happen.
  But you are  righteous and you believe in a certain way of life, and you have to love her. How  can you love anybody if the love has disappeared? You can pretend. And when you  pretend, you are killing your own love energy and you are destroying the  other's possibilities. She will never be satisfied by your pretensions; you  will never be satisfied by your pretensions. Then one day or other you are  going to fall in love with some other woman.
  Now more  misery will enter -- you will have to keep it a hidden fact. Now a secrecy. Now  you have two lives, and you have to hide from your wife about this woman, and  you have to hide about your wife from this woman. You will have to start living  in two worlds, and you will become more and more untrue. And one untruth leads  to many other untruths -- you will become a mess! And sooner or later you will  be caught. It is impossible not to be caught, one is bound to be caught.
  Deep down  you will feel miserable because you are doing something wrong. If you don't do  the wrong you feel miserable, because you don't love this woman. If you do the  right you feel miserable. if you do the wrong you feel miserable -- you are  trapped either way. This kind of righteousness is a trap it keeps people  miserable.
  My own  approach is totally radical. My approach is: I don't give you any commandments.  I trust in you more than in any commandments that can be given to you. I would  like to give you consciousness, not commandments -- not conscience but  consciousness! I would like you to become more and more aware about your life,  and I would like you to become more and more authentic about this awareness --  so that you remain one piece whatsoever happens. And whatsoever you want to do,  you have to do it responsibly. And remember, my word 'responsibility' does not  mean responsibility towards somebody else, no. When I say you have to do it  responsibly, I mean you have to be responsible to your consciousness, that's all.
  Nobody is  responsible for anybody else here. How can I be responsible for you? How can  you be responsible for me? I am responsible for whatsoever I am doing -- and I  have to do it, and I have to do it with all my heart and all my being. So  whatsoever it is, I accept it and I go with it, and I don't go on playing false  games. This is honesty.
  I don't  call that honesty which says "Honesty is the best policy." How can  honesty be a policy? A policy is in the very nature of dishonesty. Honesty is  not a policy! -- honesty is a rebellious way of life. It has no politics and no  policy in it.
  This is  what I call a really righteous person, a right person. He moves according to  his inner consciousness, and wherever it leads he is ready to accept the  consequences. He does not hide, he does not try to pretend. He lives a life of  unity. He's not many persons, he is one; he is not a crowd. He really has a  unity inside him; he is not poly-psychic. Otherwise, the righteous is the most  dangerous and the most false man in the world. Even criminals are sometimes  more innocent than your so-called righteous people.
  That's what  Jesus means when he says that "The righteousness of the righteous is not  enough" -- a tremendously important saying: The righteousness of the  righteous is not enough. It is lacking, something is missing in it -- the soul  is missing.
A monk said  to Master Seppo, "I have shaved my head, put on black clothes, received  the vows -- why am I not to be considered a Buddha?"
  Seppo said,  "There is nothing better than an absence of goodness."
Meditate over it. Seppo says, "There is nothing better than an absence of goodness." What does he mean? He is not against goodness but this IDEA that "I have done this, I have done that, now what is missing? Why am I not a Buddha? Why should I not be considered a Buddha?"
When the  first Zen Master entered China,  the emperor had come to see him. And the emperor had done many righteous acts.  He had made many Buddhist temples, thousands of Buddha statues he had spread  all over the country. He was converting the whole country to Buddhism. Millions  of monks he was feeding; he had been maintaining many monasteries. Thousands of  scholars were translating works from Buddhist scriptures into Chinese. He had  put all his treasures at the service of Buddhism. Naturally, he was feeling  very good, obviously -- he was on a great ego trip.
  And when  Bodhidharma came, he received Bodhidharma and said, "Sir, I have done this  and I have done that, and I have done this, and I am doing this -- what will be  my merit?"
  And that  Bodhidharma looked ferociously into his eyes and said, "Nothing, sir, no  merit at all. You will fall into the seventh hell."
  The emperor  could not believe it, because ALL other monks and Buddhists... many had come  before. This was the first Zen Master. Many had come before. China was  already converted, the country had almost become a Buddhist country. Many had  come and everybody had praised him like anything; and everybody had said that  "This Emperor Wu is the greatest man in the world." He was almost  respected just next to Buddha. He had done so much, and people were praising  him like anything. Books were written in praise of him, poetry was written in  praise of him, songs were sung in praise of him. Buddhists monks, Buddhist scholars,  pundits -- they were all bowing down to this emperor.
  And here  comes this Bodhidharma and he says, "No merit, sir -- not only that: you  will fall into the seventh hell. Drop this idea that you have done anything,  otherwise you are in danger!"
  Why? Because  to feel that you are doing something good simply means that doing is coming out  of the ego -- and ego is the door to hell. The righteous person is the egoistic  person, one of the most egoistic persons. And he has much to be egoistic about.  He has a reason to be egoistic. He can show the good acts that he has done.
  Then the  Emperor Wu asked, "Then what is virtue? Then what is merit? What is  PUNYA?"
  And again,  like a bolt, Bodhidharma said, "Emptiness... just emptiness."
  Wu again  tried to understand and he said, "So you say emptiness is holy?" Again  from the backdoor he brings his idea, "So emptiness is holy?"
  And  Bodhidharma shouted, "You stop this nonsense! There is nothing holy in it!  Emptiness is simply empty! What holiness? There is nothing holy in it! Emptiness  is simply empty."
  Now this  was too much, shouting at the emperor. And the emperor said, "Now this man  is not for me." And Bodhidharma turned, went back to the mountains. But  the emperor meditated over it. How can you forget such a man? The man continued  to haunt him, he became like a nightmare.
"Why  has he shattered my beliefs?" This man was living in a  dream palace, that he was going to the  seventh heaven and even Buddha may be ready to receive him at the door. This  man had shattered all his dreams. And this man looked very authentic. The  emperor knew all kinds of flatterers, they were all around him, the whole court  was full of them; and he had known all those so-called mahatmas who had come  before this man. And now he could see the difference -- this man had a fire, an  authenticity. This man was REALLY of a totally different quality, belonged to  some other dimension.
He thought  again and again, and the more and more he thought, the more and more he felt  that this Bodhidharma seemed to be right. But he could not gather courage to  invite him again. Then when he was dying -- after seven years -- on his  deathbed, he could not postpone it any longer. He told the people around him,  "Rush immediately and find out where Bodhidharma is, because that seems to  be the only man I have come across, the only real man. A man of so much virtue  that he says there is no virtue in it. A man so righteous that he does not  believe in righteousness. A man so enlightened that even virtue is a fetter. You  go! I am dying and I feel he may be right, that I will go to the seventh hell. It  was all an ego trip."
But it was  too late. When the people reached Bodhidharma, the emperor was already dead. Before  his death he told his people, "On my grave write something from Bodhidharma.  I could not write it in my heart, but at least let it be engraved on my  grave." On his grave still this whole dialogue is written:
Wu asks,  "What will my merit be?"
  And  Bodhidharma says, "Nothing. There is no merit in it, and you will fall  into the seventh hell."
"Then  what is virtue?"
And  Bodhidharma says, "Emptiness."
"And  what is holy in emptiness?"
And  Bodhidharma says, "There is nothing holy. Emptiness is simply  emptiness."
My own feeling is that if even for a single moment before death this man Wu understood it, that was enough. One moment of real understanding is enough... more than enough, more than thousands of lives of righteous living. That's what Jesus means when he says, "Righteousness is not enough, something more is needed." Conscience is just the outer shell: consciousness is needed.
SO, I DON'T  THINK MUCH OF ETHICS. Not that I am against it. I don't think much of it  because it has not made man ethical at all. And I don't think much of righteous  acts, because they are not basically righteous -- they are pretensions. First  and foremost is meditation, everything else follows. First you should go to  your innermost core. Forget about all else -- the relationship, the social  world and all that. First you should go to your innermost core, get rooted  there and let your life arise from there. And I know you will be moral, and  without being moralistic.
  Now these  are two different things. To be moral is one thing, to be moralistic is  another. The moralistic person is an ugly person; the moralistic is not moral,  just bragging about it.
  I have  heard:
A country  convert, full of zeal, offered himself for service in his first prayer meeting  remarks.
"I'm  ready to do anything the Lord asks me," said he, "so long as it's  honourable."
Now this is a moralistic person. Even with God he will have to choose. He says, "I am ready to do anything the Lord asks me, so long as it is honourable." Even with God he will choose what is honourable and what is not honourable. A moralistic person keeps an eye to judge everybody -- even God. A moralistic person is on a trip to condemn everybody. And a moralistic person is not moral because he loves: he is moral because he is afraid. His morality is out of fear, the hell, the punishment. Or maybe out of greed -- the reward in heaven and paradise.
Gil Hodges  turned down a steak dinner on a plane because it was Friday. A teammate, also a  Catholic, advised him to have the steak, saying, "There's an automatic  dispensation when you're on a plane and they're serving only that."
  Hodges  hedged, "That might be, but we're a little too close to headquarters up  here," he said.
Just the  fear... just fear keeps people moral. But fear is immoral, so how on an immoral  attitude -- the attitude of fear and greed -- can morality have its structure  raised? It is making a house on sands.
  A moral  person is unafraid and ungreedy. If you ask me my definition of morality, I  will say: a man who has no fear and no greed. Now if you think of this  definition, then your so-called righteous people will not be righteous at all,  because they are ONLY greedy and afraid. If somebody comes and declares to the  world and convinces everybody that there is no hell, out of your one hundred  moralistic people, ninety-nine will immediately rush into sin. Fear has disappeared.  And if somebody comes and says, "There is no paradise either. and you are  not going to be rewarded; sinners and saints -- all are alike once they have  died," then the remaining one percent will also fall into sin.
  There is a  story about Jesus. It is not related in the Bible but in Sufi sources.
Jesus comes  to a town and he sees a few people sitting on a veranda, very sad -- crying,  weeping, beating their chests. He asks, "What has happened to you? What  wrong has happened to you? Who has created this state? Who has made you so  miserable?"
  And they  say, "Nobody. We are afraid of hell. We are religious people, and we are  afraid of all the sins that we have committed. We are asking for  forgiveness."
  Jesus moves  ahead. He comes across another group, sitting in a garden, very sad -- not  weeping, not crying, but very sad, very dull, almost stagnant life energies. He  asks, "What has happened to you? Why do you look so stupefied?"
  And they  say, "We are worried whether we are going to make it or not -- the paradise,  Firdaus -- whether we will be able to make it or not! The very anxiety  paralyzes us. If we miss, then...? We don't do anything wrong! we keep away  from anything that can have any connection with wrong, but still the mind goes  on being worried whether we are going to make it, whether we will be able to  enter paradise. That very greed is making us very sad, anxious,  paralyzed."
These are  the two kinds of religious people in the world.
  Another  parable:
A Sufi  mystic woman, Rabiya, was found one day running in the marketplace, shouting  like a lunatic. In one hand she had a torch, a burning torch. In another hand  she had a pot full of water.
  So somebody  inquired, "Rabiya, what has happened to you? What are you doing? Where are  you going? And why this torch and the pot with water?"
  She said,  "I am going to drown hell with this water, and I am going to burn paradise  with this torch. Only then can the world be religious, never before it."
The moral  person is the one who has no fear and no greed. But fear and greed disappear  only when the mind disappears. They are the two wheels of the mind. The  mind-cart moves on these two wheels; hence, those who know, they say morality  is a by-product -- the real thing is meditation.
  And then  when you do one thing wrong, you have to find a thousand and one explanations  why you had to do it. You rationalize, you try to protect yourself against the  fear. You da a small thing and you make it look very big. You just give some  help to some beggar and you make it look very big, as if you have done  something very great. Or you do something wrong, and then you make it look very  small. And you try to find reasons why you had to do it. It was not really that  you wanted to do it, but the circumstances were like that. The situation was  such that you had to do it.
  This  constant rationalizing in the mind makes you more and more foggy, dim and dull.  And, by and by, you lose all proportion; you don't see things as they are. Magnifying  one thing, making it look very big, and on the other hand trying to make things  look very small, you lose all perspective. Then you can't see things as they  are in their real size and shape. Your world becomes a very very illusory  world.
The husband  wired home that he had been able to wind up his business trip a day early and  would be home on Wednesday. When he walked into his apartment, however, he  found his wife in bed with another man. Furious, he picked up his bag and  stormed out; he met his mother-in-law on the street, told her what had happened  and announced that he was filing suit for divorce in the morning.
"Give  my daughter a chance to explain before you do anything," the older woman  pleaded. Reluctantly, he agreed.
An hour  later, his mother-in-law phoned the husband at his club. "I knew my  daughter would have an explanation," she said, a note of triumph in her  voice, "She didn't receive your telegram!"
That's how  things go on. We go on finding some foolish kind of explanations why we did  this and why we didn't do that. These foolish explanations are keeping your  mind clouded. Don't start by being moral; start by being meditative. And you  will be surprised that morality comes without any effort on your part to bring  it. And when it comes without any effort, it has a beauty of its own. It is so  natural.
  Then you  don't brag, then you don't hanker for any paradise. You did the right thing  because that's how you enjoyed doing it. There is no more profit in it, there  is no more motive in it -- it is unmotivated. You do the right thing because  that is the way you enjoy doing it. You don't do the wrong thing, because that  is the way you don't enjoy doing it. It is simple! You don't become righteous.  You become more and more joyful that's all. You become more and more  celebrating, and you don't feel that you are obliging everybody in the world. And  you don't feel that others are not so righteous as you are, and you don't need  any God to give you any more rewards for it. The right act is its own reward.  To ask for any other reward simply means you have not known yet what the right  act is.
  When you  love, the very rightness of it gives you joy. When you share, the very  rightness of it gives you great peace, silence, delight. When you steal, the  very wrongness of it makes you feel hellish. When you cheat, the very wrongness  of it brings your energies low, you feel depressed. There is no need for any  heaven and hell in the future; each act brings its own hell, and each act  brings its own heaven. And you go on moving between these two -- a thousand and  one times in one day.
  You do  something good and you are happy, and you do something bad and you are unhappy.  And I am not saying that there is any outer criterion to judge it by. If you  understand me rightly, there is only one inner criterion: whatsoever you feel  good doing, whatsoever you feel joyful doing, is right; and whatsoever you feel  miserable doing, is not right. If you can see that point, then your life will  have morality and no moralism. You will not be a puritan.
  Enter into  your own being and others disappear. Then your morality is not a consideration  for others, it is just an outpouring of your inner being. You are moral because  you are happy that way. The morality is your poetry, your song. It is your  fragrance.
One time,  the old Zen Master, D. T. Suzuki, gave a talk on Zen in Tokyo. He spoke of the silence, the  emptiness, the nothingness, and all the rest, together with the deep wisdom  that comes from satori. When he had finished, one of his audience rose to his  feet and, not without a touch of irritation exclaimed, "But Dr. Suzuki,  what about society? What about other people? What about the other?"
  Suzuki  looked at the man with a smile and remarked, "But there is no other."
There is no  other, and there is no self. That is the illumination that comes through meditation.  You disappear and the other disappears immediately, because the other exists  only as a counterpart to 'I'. 'I' creates 'thou'; the self creates the other.  When the self disappears in meditation, the other disappears also. Then there  is a natural flow. In that natural flow everything is right of its own accord  -- not that you have to put it right again and again, not that you have to be  very very careful and considerate and concerned. It creates no anxiety, it  follows you like your shadow wherever you go. That morality is religion.
  So, let me  repeat:
DOES RIGHTEOUS CONDUCT HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH ENLIGHTENMENT?
Nothing at all, but enlightenment has much to do with righteous conduct.
AND THE LAST POINT IN THE QUESTION: I THINK IF YOU DON'T WORK YOU DON'T EAT" IS A VERY GOOD MOTTO.
Very  moralistic, but not very good. Shows your miserliness, shows your  money-mindedness, shows your very very hard heart. Good, at a very low level.
  If you are  thinking only of the other, it looks good: why should he eat if he does not  work? But you are not thinking about yourself at all. Can't you be generous  enough to share with somebody who is not working? Why should you be so miserly?  Why should work be a condition?
  I know it  has been a condition in the past, because the past has been very poor. It has  nothing to do with morality; it is just because of the poverty of the past that  such mottoes became important. They were necessary evils, they have nothing  important about them. It was just a necessity. People were poor in the world,  and somebody not working was a heavy burden. All people working, then too there  was not enough food, not enough clothes, not enough shelter. Life has been very  miserable. Out of that misery these mottoes were created. They have nothing to  do with morality; they are just part of the past economics of poverty. They  have nothing to do with religion either.
  But in the  future, when more and more technology will make it possible for more and more  people to be free of work, then...? Will this motto work: "If you don't  work you don't eat"? In fact, we will have to reverse the motto  completely. We may even have to say: "If you work you don't eat!" You  can't have both. If you want to work you can work, but then you don't eat --  because more work will not be possible. Once technology takes over, the lazy  person will become the ideal hero; the one who does not work at all will be  appreciated, because he will not ask and he will not demand from the society,  "I need work!" He will say, "I am happy without work."
  But there  are going to be millions of people who will not be able to relax and they will  demand work. They will say, "Work is a must. We cannot sit. What should we  do?" You know -- what do you do on holiday? You become so tired of not  doing anything at all, you become so bored, that you start hankering for Monday  to come. You start thinking about what you are going to do tomorrow in the  office.
  When you  are not doing anything, when you are unoccu-pied, you feel it very very  difficult to tackle that emptiness, because you are not meditative. Only a  meditative person can relax into unoccupiedness. The future belongs to  meditators not to workers. In the future, sooner or later -- after this century  -- it is going to happen that this motto will become one of the ugliest  mottoes. And anybody demanding work will be thought of as an anti-social  element -- because from where to bring the work? To give him work means to  create trouble that machine can do better work more cheaply, more easily, more  fast, more efficiently -- and the man demands work! From where to find the  work? Then there is a possibility we may have to make a motto that if you  demand work, if you are too much attached to work, you can have work, but then  you cannot eat.
  People who  will be lazy, people who will be just lousy, people who will be just resting,  meditating or playing guitar -- they will be the respected citizens of the  world. Then what will happen to your motto?
  It has  nothing to do with morality, it is just a necessity -- in the past it has been  so. But don't try to confuse economics with religion, otherwise all that is  beautiful will disappear.
  Then how to  define work? Buddha, is he a man who works? It will be difficult to define...  whether he works or not, whether he is entitled to eat or not? Whether I am  entitled to eat or not? It depends on you. If you love me you will say,  "Yes, your work is great! It is creativity, this and that." If you  don't love me you will say, "This is useless. What is the work in that?  You better do some pottery or carpentry. Be creative, do something useful!  Teaching people meditation is a useless thing. You are not doing anything and  you are teaching other people not to do anything."
  What is  work? Is Christ entitled to eat or not? Michelangelo? Wagner? Kalidas?  Shakespeare? Are they entitled to eat or not? It will depend on how you define  work.
  If  Bodhidharma enters China  now, he will be put in jail. He did well -- he entered many many hundreds of  years ago. Now if he enters Maoist China, he will be put in jail. There are  many Buddhist monks and Lao Tzuan monks in jail -- for being lazy, for not  doing anything that THEY call creative or useful. This is happening! This has  happened in China, this has  happened in Russia.  Monasteries have been deserted, people have been forced to work.
  In the East  we have supported the sannyasin for centuries. Why? Because we know that his  work is tremendously creative. It is not creative on the surface, but what  Buddha is doing just by being here is tremendously significant. But that  depends on your interpretation. Otherwise Buddha is just lousy. His work is not  visible; it is not there like an object that can be seen and looked at and  judged. It is very mysterious. It is there for those who are ready to fall en  rapport with him. They know that what he has done nobody has ever done.
  Work in  itself is not a value. And remember, the active people have been the most  dangerous in the world. The inactive people have been the least harmful,  because even to be harmful one has to be very active. The inactive people have  not harmed anybody. If Adolf Hitler had been inactive, a little lazy and lousy,  the world would have been better. But he was not. He was a great worker. If  Mussolini and Stalin had been a little less active people, the world would have  been far better.
  Just think  -- Tamerlaine and Genghis Khan and Nadir Shah and Alexander and Napoleon --  these are the really active people. They have created the whole history. It is  not history -- it is hysteria. They have created this whole neurosis that we  call history.
  Why do you  go on praising work? And remember, I am not saying that one should not work. No,  I am not saying that, not at all. But these things should not be raised to  moral mottoes. They are economic things; they should belong to their realm. They  should not become commandments. They change with circumstances.
  It is good  to work -- but, again, my emphasis is that you should work from your innermost  core. If you feel like doing something, you should do it. You should not be  manipulated by others. For example, you should not continue to be a doctor if  you want to be a carpenter. By being a doctor you earn more, by being a  carpenter you will not earn more, you will remain a beggar. But my insistence  is that if that feels good for you, then that is right. Drop it, don't be a  doctor -- be a carpenter! Or if you would like to be fisherman on the lake  somewhere, you will be even more poor, but if that is what feels more in tune  with your being, then that is what has to be done. No other consideration is  important.
  There are a  few people who will not feel like working at all. In a better human world they  have to be allowed their lousiness, their laziness. We should be at least that  much human. If somebody does not feel like working, then can't we be human and  generous enough that he should be allowed? He is not asking for much -- just  bread, a shelter.
  'In a  religious world we will appreciate him, we will not condemn him. There is a  possibility -- a few people ARE that way, made that way. Don't impose. Rarely  are there such people, and if you accept them without any condemnation and you  don't make them feel guilty, you are religious, you are righteous, you are  really a moral person. There is no need to make them feel guilty. What wrong is  there? What is going to happen by all the work that you are doing? Everything  disappears into death. And if somebody does not have that feel....
  I know one  man. I have watched him. He was a student with me... very lazy. Then he became  a professor with me, and we lived together. He is very lazy, but I loved that  man. He has tremendous qualities. His laziness is not just laziness -- he has a  certain grace, a certain beauty. That beauty in itself is so valuable that I  would not like to destroy that beauty by putting him into work. Just his being  there -- plain lazy -- creates such a pool of energy that whosoever comes close  to him feels happy; as if you have passed through a garden where there was much  freshness and cool fresh air and the fragrance of flowers.
  He is plain  lazy. He has never done anything, and he is not going to do anything. What  should we do? Should we make him feel guilty? That's what everybody has been  doing to him.
  When he met  me and I allowed him to stay with me, for three months he watched -- whether I  would condemn him or not. When I didn't condemn him and when I didn't say  anything... because he's so plain lazy that if he is thirsty he will just go on  Lying down on the bed. He will wait for me to ask, "Are you thirsty or  something?"
  When for  three months I didn't say a single word to him, and I did everything that I  felt was needed to be done for him, after three months he started crying. And  he said, "You are the first man who has accepted me. You are the first man  who has given me my soul. Nobody has loved me, and everybody has made me feel  guilty." And naturally, when the whole world makes you feel guilty, you  start feeling guilty. You start feeling a great hate arising in you against  yourself.
  He flowered  in those three months, he bloomed. And out of that blooming, something started  happening. He started singing, he started writing poems. Then one day he  started playing the guitar. But it came out of the acceptance, that at least  one human being accepted him totally. If he got up at ten o'clock in the  morning, I was not going to say to get up at nine-thirty. Ten is perfectly  okay! If you feel like that, it is okay. A person should be allowed to be  himself.
  So I  understand what you mean when you say: I THINK "IF YOU DON'T WORK YOU  DON'T EAT" IS A VERY GOOD MOTTO. It has been good in a way because the  society has been poor, starving. But it is not good for you! You should be able  to accept the other's reality as it is without any judgement. And you should be  able to give the freedom to the other to be himself without any hindrance. That  is real morality. That is to be really religious.
  Yes, a few  people will remain lazy, but nothing to be worried about. There are lazy men's  guides to enlightenment too! Lao Tzu is the highest priest for the lazy man.
  Active  people do something in the world which is important. Lazy people also do  something beautiful in the world which is needed. They create a balance,  harmony, equilibrium.
Next: Chapter 7: A Snowflake Dissolving in Pure Air
Energy Enhancement Enlightened Texts Zen Paradox, Vol. 3
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