Thursday, April 26, 2007

big fish, little pond

saw this on a funny yet insightful site.


Here’s a good story to illustrate the big fish in the little pond theorem. 2 guys are hiking in the woods. They turn a corner and they see a big hungry grizzly bear. The first guy starts to slowly take off his back pack. “What are you doing?” whispers the second guy, “you know you can't outrun a grizzly bear!”

“I only have to out run you.” Says the first guy.

Be the big fish!

The Rebel and Buddha

"The way of Gautama the Buddha is the way of intelligence, understanding, awareness, meditation. It is not the way of belief; it is the way of seeing the truth itself. Belief simply covers up your ignorance; it does not deliver you from ignorance. Belief is a deception you play upon yourself; is it not transformation.

And the people who think themselves religious are only believers, not religious. They have no clarity, no understanding, no insight into the nature of things. They don't know what they are doing, they don't know what they are thinking. They are simply repeating conventions, traditions; dead words spoken long long ago. They cannot be certain whether those words are true or not. Nobody can be certain unless one realizes oneself.

There is only one certainty in existence and that is your own realization, your own seeing. Unless that happens, don't become contented; remain discontented. Discontentment is divine; contentment through beliefs is stupid. It is through divine discontent that one grows, but it is the path which is arduous. The path of belief is simple, convenient, comfortable. You need not do anything. You have only to say yes to the authorities: the authorities of the church, of the state. You have simply to be a slave to people who are in power.

But to follow the path of Buddha one has to be a rebel. Rebellion is its essential taste; it is only for the rebellious spirit. But only rebellious people have spirits, only they have soul. Others are hollow, empty."

- Osho, The Dhammapada Series 8