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 |  | Vigyan Bhairav Tantra - Meditation 
		Technique 18 
		LOOK LOVINGLY ON SOME OBJECT. DO NOT GO ON TO ANOTHER 
		OBJECT. HERE IN THE MIDDLE OF THE OBJECT -- THE BLESSING.
 Osho - 
		I should repeat it:
 
 LOOK LOVINGLY ON SOME OBJECT. DO NOT GO ON TO ANOTHER. Do not move to 
		another object. HERE IN THE MIDDLE OF THIS OBJECT -- THE BLESSING.
 
 LOOK LOVINGLY ON SOME OBJECT...
 
 LOVINGLY is the key. Have you ever looked lovingly at any object? You 
		may say yes because you do not know what it means to look lovingly at an 
		object. You may have looked lustfully at an object -- that is another 
		thing. That is totally different, diametrically opposite. So first, the 
		difference; try to feel the difference.
 
 A beautiful face, a beautiful body -- you look at it, and you feel that 
		you are looking at it lovingly. But why are you looking at it? Do you 
		want to get something out of it? Then it is lust, not love. Do you want 
		to exploit it? Then it is lust, not love. Then really, you are thinking 
		of how to use this body, how to possess it, how to make this body an 
		instrument for your happiness.
 
 Lust means how to use something for your happiness; love means your 
		happiness is not at all concerned. Really, lust means how to get 
		something out of it and love means how to give something. They are 
		diametrically opposite.
 
 If you see a beautiful face and you feel love toward the face, the 
		immediate feeling in your consciousness will be how to do something to 
		make this face happy, how to do something to make this man or this woman 
		happy. The concern is not with yourself, the concern is with the other.
 
 In love the other is important; in lust you are important. In lust you 
		are thinking how to make the other your instrument; in love you are 
		thinking how to become an instrument yourself. In lust you are going to 
		sacrifice the other; in love you are going to sacrifice yourself. Love 
		means giving; lust means getting. Love is a surrender; lust is an 
		aggression.
 
 What you say is meaningless. Even in lust you talk in terms of love. 
		Your language is not very meaningful, so do not be deceived. Look 
		within, and then you will come to understand that you have not once in 
		your life looked lovingly toward someone or some object.
 
 The second distinction to be made: this sutra says, LOOK LOVINGLY ON 
		SOME OBJECT.
 
 Really, even if you look lovingly at something material, insentient, the 
		object will become a person. If you look lovingly at it, your love is 
		the key to transform anything into a person. If you look lovingly at a 
		tree, the tree becomes a person.
 
 Just the other day I was talking with Vivek, a close disciple, and I 
		told her that when we move to the new ashram we will name every tree, 
		because every tree is a person. Have you ever heard of anyone naming a 
		tree? No one names a tree because no one feels love for it. If the case 
		were otherwise, a tree would become a person. Then it is not just one in 
		a crowd, it becomes unique.
 
 You name dogs and cats. When you name a dog and you call it Tiger or 
		something else, the dog becomes a person. Then it is not just one dog 
		amongst other dogs, it has a personality; you have created a person. 
		Whenever you look lovingly at something, it becomes a person.
 
 And the contrary is also true. Whenever you look with lustful eyes 
		toward a person, the person becomes an object, a thing. That is why 
		lustful eyes are repulsive -- because no one likes to become a thing. 
		When you look at your wife with lustful eyes -- or at any other woman, 
		or man, with lustful eyes -- the other feels hurt. What are you doing 
		really? You are changing a person, a living person, into a dead 
		instrument. You are thinking of how to "use," and the person is killed.
 
 That is why lustful eyes are repulsive, ugly. When you look at someone 
		with love, the other is raised. He becomes unique. Suddenly he becomes a 
		person. A person cannot be replaced; a thing can be replaced. A `thing' 
		means that which is replaceable; a `person' means that which cannot be 
		replaced: there is no possibility of replacing him or her. A person is 
		unique; a thing is not unique.
 
 Love makes anything unique. That is why without love you never feel like 
		a person. Unless someone loves you deeply, you never feel that you have 
		any uniqueness. You are just one in a crowd -- just a number, a datum. 
		You can be changed.
 
 For example, if you are a clerk in an office or a teacher in a school or 
		a professor in a university, your professor-hood is replaceable. Another 
		professor will replace you; he can replace you at any moment because you 
		are just used there as a professor. You have a functional meaning and 
		significance.
 
 If you are a clerk, someone else is easily able to do the work. The work 
		will not wait for you. If you die this moment, the next moment someone 
		will replace you and the mechanism will continue. You were just a figure 
		-- another figure will do. You were just a utility.
 
 But then someone falls in love with this clerk or this professor. 
		Suddenly the clerk is no more a clerk; he has become a unique person. If 
		he dies, then the beloved cannot replace him. He is irreplaceable. Then 
		the whole world may go on in the same way, but the one who was in love 
		cannot be the same. This uniqueness, this being a person, happens 
		through love.
 
 This sutra says, LOOK LOVINGLY AT SOME OBJECT.
 
 It makes no distinction between an object and a person. There is no 
		need, because when you look lovingly anything will become a person. The 
		very look changes, transforms.
 
 You may or may not have observed what happens when you drive a 
		particular car, say a Fiat. There are thousands and thousands and 
		thousands of Fiats exactly similar, but your car, if you are in love 
		with it, becomes unique -- a person. It cannot be replaced; a 
		relationship is created. Now you feel this car as a person. If something 
		goes wrong... a slight sound, and you feel it. And cars are very 
		temperamental. You know the temper of your car -- when it feels good and 
		when it feels bad. The car becomes, by and by, a person.
 
 Why? If there is a love relationship, anything becomes a person. If 
		there is a lust relationship, then a person will become a thing. And 
		this is one of the most inhuman acts man can do -- to make someone a 
		thing.
 
 LOOK LOVINGLY AT SOME OBJECT...
 
 So what is one to do? When you look lovingly, what are you to do? The 
		first thing: forget yourself. Forget yourself completely! Look at a 
		flower and forget yourself completely. Let the flower be; you become 
		completely absent. Feel the flower, and a deep love will flow from your 
		consciousness toward the flower. And let your consciousness be filled 
		with only one thought -- how you can help this flower to flower more, to 
		become more beautiful, to become more blissful. What can you do?
 
 It is not meaningful whether you can do or not; that is not relevant. 
		The feeling of what you can do -- this pain, this deep ache over what 
		you can do to make this flower more beautiful, more alive, more 
		flowering -- is meaningful. Let this thought reverberate into your whole 
		being. Let every fiber of your body and mind feel it. You will be 
		transfixed in an ecstasy, and the flower will become a person.
 
 DO NOT GO ON TO ANOTHER OBJECT...
 
 You cannot go. If you are in a love relationship, you cannot go. If you 
		love someone in this group, then you forget the whole crowd; only one 
		face remains. Really, you do not see anyone else, you see only one face. 
		All the others are there, but they are subliminal -- just on the 
		periphery of your consciousness. They are NOT. They are just shadows; 
		only one face remains. If you love someone then only that face remains, 
		so you cannot move.
 
 Do not go to another object, remain with one. Remain with a roseflower 
		or remain with a beloved's face. Remain there loving, flowing, with just 
		one heart, with the feeling of, "What can I do to make the loved one 
		happier, blissful?"
 
 HERE IN THE MIDDLE OF THE OBJECT -- THE BLESSING.
 
 And when this is the case you are absent, not concerned with yourself at 
		all, not selfish, not thinking in terms of your pleasure, your 
		gratification. You have forgotten yourself completely, and you are just 
		thinking in terms of the other. The other has become the center of your 
		love; your consciousness is flowing toward the other. With deep 
		compassion, with a deep feeling of love, you are thinking, "What can I 
		do to make the loved one blissful?" In this state, suddenly, HERE IN THE 
		MIDDLE OF THE OBJECT -- THE BLESSING. Suddenly, as a by-product, the 
		blessing comes to you. Suddenly you become centered.
 
 This looks paradoxical because this sutra says to forget yourself 
		completely, not to be self-centered, to move to the other completely. 
		Buddha is reported to have said continuously that whenever you are 
		praying, pray for others -- never for yourself. Otherwise the prayer is 
		just useless.
 
 One man came to Buddha and he said, "I accept your teaching, but only 
		one thing is very difficult to accept. You say that whenever we do 
		prayer we are not to think about ourselves, we are not to ask anything 
		about ourselves. We have to say, `Whatsoever may be the result of my 
		prayer, let that result be distributed to all. If blessing happens, let 
		it be distributed to all.'"
 
 The man said, "This is okay, but can I make only one exception? Not to 
		my immediate neighbor -- he is my enemy. Let this blessing be 
		distributed to all except to my immediate neighbor."
 
 The mind is self-centered, so Buddha said, "Your prayer is useless. 
		Nothing will come out of it unless you are ready to give all, to 
		distribute all, and then all will be yours."
 
 In love you are to forget yourself. It looks paradoxical: then when and 
		how will the centering happen? By being totally concerned with the 
		other, with the other's happiness, when you forget yourself completely 
		and only the other remains there, suddenly you are filled with bliss -- 
		the blessing.
 
 Why? Because when you are not concerned with yourself you become vacant, 
		empty; the inner space is created. When your mind is totally concerned 
		with the other, you become mindless within. Then there are no thoughts 
		inside. And then this thought -- "How can I be helpful? How can I create 
		more bliss? How can the other be more happy?" -- cannot continue any 
		more, because really, there is nothing you can do. This thought becomes 
		a stop. There is nothing you can do. What can you do? If you think you 
		can do, you are still thinking in terms of yourself -- ego.
 
 With the love object one becomes totally helpless -- remember this. 
		Whenever you love someone you feel totally helpless. That is the agony 
		of love: one cannot feel what he can do. He wants to do everything, he 
		wants to give the whole universe to the lover or the beloved -- but what 
		can he do? If you think that you can do this or that, you are still not 
		in a love relationship. Love is very helpless, absolutely helpless, and 
		that helplessness is the beauty, because in that helplessness you are 
		surrendered.
 
 Love someone and you will feel helpless; hate someone and you can do 
		something. Love someone and you are absolutely helpless -- because what 
		can you do? Whatsoever you can do seems insignificant, meaningless; it 
		is never enough. Nothing can be done. And when one feels that nothing 
		can be done, one feels that one is helpless. When one wants to do 
		everything and feels nothing can be done, mind stops. In this 
		helplessness surrender happens. You are empty. That is why love becomes 
		a deep meditation.
 
 Really, if you love someone, no other meditation is needed. But because 
		no one loves, one hundred and twelve methods are needed -- and even they 
		may not be enough.
 
 Someone was here the other day. He was telling me, "It gives me much 
		hope. I have heard for the first time from you that there are one 
		hundred and twelve methods. It gives me much hope, but somewhere a 
		depression also comes into the mind: only one hundred and twelve 
		methods? And if these one hundred and twelve methods don't work for me, 
		then is there no one hundred and thirteenth?"
 
 And he is right. He is right! If these one hundred and twelve methods do 
		not work for you, then there is no go. So as he suggests, a depression 
		also follows hope. But really, methods are needed because the basic 
		method is missing. If you can love, no method is needed.
 
 Love itself is the greatest method, but love is difficult -- in a way 
		impossible. Love means putting yourself out from your consciousness, and 
		in the same place, where your ego has been in existence, putting someone 
		else. Replacing yourself by someone else means love -- as if now you are 
		not and only the other is.
 
 Jean Paul Sartre says that the other is the hell, and he is right. He is 
		right because the other creates only hell for you. But he is wrong also 
		because if the other can be hell, the other can he heaven. If you live 
		through lust, the other is a hell because then you are trying to kill 
		that person. You are trying to make that person a thing. Then that 
		person will also react and will try to make you a thing, and that 
		creates hell.
 
 So every husband and every wife, they are creating hell for each other 
		because each one is trying to possess the other. Possession is possible 
		only with things, never with persons. You can only be possessed by a 
		person; you can never possess a person. A thing can be possessed, but 
		you try to possess persons. Through that effort persons become things. 
		If I make you into a thing, you will react. Then I am your enemy. Then 
		you will try to make a thing out of me -- that creates hell.
 
 You are sitting in your room alone, and then suddenly you become aware 
		that someone is peeping through the keyhole. Observe minutely what 
		happens. Have you felt any change? And why do you feel angry about this 
		peeping Tom? He is not doing anything to you -- just peeping. Why do you 
		feel angry? He has changed you into a thing. He is observing; he has 
		made you into a thing, into an object. That gives you an uneasiness.
 
 And the same will happen to him if you come near the keyhole and look 
		through it. The other will become shattered, shocked. He was a subject 
		just a moment before: he was the observer and you were the observed. Now 
		suddenly he has been caught. He has been observed observing you, and now 
		he has become a thing.
 
 When someone is observing you, suddenly you feel your freedom has been 
		disturbed, destroyed. That is why, unless you are in love with someone, 
		you cannot stare. That stare becomes ugly and violent -- unless you are 
		in love. If you are in love then a stare is a beautiful thing, because 
		your stare is not changing the other into a thing. Then you can look 
		directly into the eyes; then you can go deep into the eyes of the other. 
		You are not changing him into a thing. Rather, through your love your 
		look is making him a person. That is why only the stares of lovers are 
		beautiful; otherwise stares are ugly.
 
 Psychologists say there is a time limit. And you all know, observe and 
		you will come to know, what the time limit is for how long you can stare 
		into someone's eyes, if he is a stranger. There is a time limit. One 
		moment more, and the other will become angry. Just a passing look in 
		public can be pardoned because it seems as if you were just seeing, not 
		looking.
 
 A look is a deep thing. If I just see you when passing, no relationship 
		is created. Or I am passing and you look at me, just while passing -- no 
		offense is meant so it is okay. But if you suddenly stand and look at 
		me, you become an observer. Then your look will disturb me and I will 
		feel insulted: "What are you doing? I am a person, not a thing. This is 
		not the way to look."
 
 Because of this, clothes have become so meaningful. Only when you love 
		someone can you be easily naked, because the moment you are naked your 
		whole body becomes an object. Someone can look at your whole body, and 
		if he is not in love with you his eyes will turn your whole body, your 
		whole being, into an object. But when you are in love with someone you 
		can be naked without feeling that you are naked. Rather, you would like 
		to be naked, because you would like this transforming love to transform 
		your whole body into a person.
 
 Whenever you are turning someone into a thing, that act is immoral. But 
		if you are filled with love, then in that love-filled moment with any 
		object this phenomenon, this blessing, is possible. It happens.
 
 IN THE MIDDLE OF THE OBJECT -- THE BLESSING.
 
 Suddenly you have forgotten yourself -- the other was there. Then when 
		the right moment comes, when you are no longer present, absolutely 
		absent, the other will also become absent. And between the two the 
		blessing happens. That is what lovers feel. That blessing is also 
		because of an unknown, unconscious meditation.
 
 When two lovers are there, by and by they both become absent. A pure 
		existence remains -- without any egos, without any conflict... just a 
		communion. In that communion one feels blissful. It is wrongly inferred 
		that the other has given that bliss to you. That bliss has come because 
		unknowingly you have fallen into a deep meditative technique.
 
 You can do it consciously -- and when you do it consciously it goes 
		deeper, because then you are not obsessed with the object. This is 
		happening every day. If you love someone, you feel blissful not because 
		of him or her, but because of love. And why because of love? Because 
		this phenomenon happens -- this sutra happens.
 
 But then you become obsessed. Then you think that because of A, because 
		of A's proximity, nearness, because of A's love this blessing happens. 
		Then you think, "I must possess A, because without A being present I may 
		not be able to get this blessing again." You become jealous. If someone 
		else possesses A, then he will be blissful and you will feel miserable, 
		so you want to take away all possibilities of A being possessed by 
		anyone else. A should be possessed only by you, because you have 
		glimpsed a different world through him. Then the moment you try to 
		possess, you will destroy the whole beauty and the whole phenomenon.
 
 When the lover is possessed, love is gone. Then the lover is just a 
		thing. You can use it, but the blessing will never come again, because 
		that blessing was coming when the other was a person. The other was 
		made, created: you created the person in the other, and the other 
		created the person in you. No one was an object. Both were 
		subjectivities meeting -- two persons meeting, not one person and one 
		thing.
 
 But the moment you possess, this will become impossible. And mind will 
		try to possess because mind thinks in terms of greed: "One day bliss has 
		happened, so it must happen to me every day. So I must possess." But the 
		bliss happens because there is no possession. And the bliss happens not 
		because of the other, really, but because of you. Remember this, the 
		bliss happens because of you. Because you are so absorbed in the other, 
		the bliss happens.
 
 It can happen with a roseflower, it can happen with a rock, it can 
		happen with the trees, it can happen with anything. Once you know the 
		situation in which it happens, it can happen anywhere. If you know that 
		you are not, and with a deep love your consciousness has moved to the 
		other -- to the trees, to the sky, to the stars, to anyone; when your 
		total consciousness is addressed to the other it leaves you, it moves 
		away from you -- in that absence of the self is the blessing.
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