Beyond enlightenment is only beyondness. Enlightenment is the last host.
Beyond it, all boundaries disappear, all experiences disappear. Experience comes to its
utmost in enlightenment; it is the very peak of all that is beautiful, of all that is immortal,
of all that is blissful -- but it is an experience. Beyond enlightenment there is no
experience at all, because the experiencer has disappeared. Enlightenment is not only the
peak of experience, it is also the finest definition of your being. Beyond it, there is only
nothingness; you will not come again to a point which has to be transcended.
Experience, the experiencer, enlightenment -- all have been left behind. You are part of
the tremendous nothingness that is infinite. This is the nothingness out of which the
whole existence comes, the womb; and this is the nothingness in which all the existence
disappears.
Science has something parallel; there is bound to be something parallel. The spiritual
experience is of the interior world, and science is the exploration of the exterior. But both
are wings of the same existence -- the inwardness and the outwardness -- they always
have similar points.
Scientists have come to a strange conclusion in this century, that a few stars suddenly
disappear... and stars are not small things; they are not so small as they look to you. They
look small because they are so far away, millions of light years away, but they are huge.
Our sun is a star, but of a mediocre size, medium size. In comparison to the earth it is
vast, but in comparison to other stars it is a small, medium-sized star. There are stars
which are a thousand times bigger than the sun.
And in this century, for the first time we had the instruments of observation and we were
very much puzzled: suddenly a star disappears, not even leaving a trace behind of where
it has gone. Such a huge phenomenon, and not even footprints -- in what direction has it
gone? It has just moved simply into nothingness. This was happening continually.
It took almost twenty years to figure out this new phenomenon: that in existence there are
black holes. You cannot see them, but they have tremendous gravitation. Even the biggest
star, if it comes within their radius of magnetism, will be pulled in. And once it is pulled
into a black hole, it disappears. It is the ultimate death. We can only see the effect; we
cannot see the black hole, we only see that one star is disappearing.
After the black hole was almost an established theory, scientists started thinking that
there must be something like a white hole -- there has to be. If it is possible that in a
certain gravitation, magnetic force, a big star simply disappears out of existence.... We
have been aware that every day stars are born. From where are they coming? -- nobody
has asked it before.
In fact, birth we always take for granted; nobody asks from where the babies are coming.
Death we never accept, because we are so much afraid of it.
There is not a single philosophy in the whole history of man which thinks about where
the babies come from, but there are philosophies and philosophies thinking about what is
dead, where people go on disappearing to, what happens after death.
In my whole life I have come across millions of people, and not a single person has asked
what happens before birth -- and thousands have asked what happens after death. I have
always been thinking, why is birth taken without any question? Why is death not taken in
the same way?
We were aware for centuries, almost three centuries, that stars are being born every day --
big stars, huge stars -- and nobody raised the question, "From where are these stars
coming?" But when we came to know about the black holes and we saw the stars
disappearing, then the second question became almost an absolute necessity. If black
holes can take stars into nothingness, then there must be something like white holes
where things... stars come out of nothingness.
I am reminded.... Mulla Nasruddin had applied for a post on a ship. He was interviewed.
The captain and the high officials of the ship were sitting in a room. Mulla entered. The
captain asked, "If the seas are in a turmoil, winds are strong, waves are huge and
mountainous, what are you going to do to save the ship? It is tossed from here to there...."
Mulla Nasruddin said, "It is not much of a problem: I will just drop a huge anchor to keep
the ship stable against the winds, against the waves. It is not much of a problem."
The captain again said, "Suppose another mountainous wave comes and the ship is going
to be drowned; what are you going to do?"
He said, "Nothing -- another huge anchor."
The captain looked at him and asked a third time, "Suppose it is a great typhoon and it is
impossible to save the ship. What are you going to do?"
He said, "Nothing, the same -- a huge anchor."
The captain said, "From where are you getting these huge anchors?"
He said, "From the same place. From where are you getting these great, mountainous
waves, strong winds? -- from the same place. You go on getting them, I will go on getting
bigger and bigger anchors."
If there are holes in existence where things simply disappear into non-existence, then
there must be holes from where things appear from nothingness -- and just a little
imagination is needed. Scientists have not worked on it yet.
My suggestion is that a black hole is like a door: from one side it is a black door, a black
hole -- things go into it and disappear into nothingness. And from the other side of the
tunnel -- it is the same door, just from the other side -- it is a white hole; things are born
again, renewed. It is the same womb.
Beyond enlightenment you enter into nothingness.
Experience disappears, experiencer disappears.
Just pure nothingness remains, utter silence.
Perhaps this is the destiny of every human being, sooner or later to be achieved.
We don't know yet whether there is a white hole or not -- there must be.
Just as you enter beyond enlightenment into nothingness, there must be a possibility of
coming out of nothingness back into form, back into existence -- renewed, refreshed,
luminous -- on a totally different plane. Because nothing is destroyed, things can only go
into a dormant state; things can go only into deep sleep. Then in the morning they wake
up again. This is how the existence goes on.
In the West, this idea has never happened in the two thousand years' history of
philosophy. They only think of this creation: "Who created this?" and they get into
troubles because whatever the answer is, it is going to create more questions.
In the East we have a conception of circles of existence and non-existence, just like day
and night. Creation is followed by de-creation, everything goes into nothingness, just as
day is followed by night and everything goes into darkness. And the period is going to be
the same: as long as the creation is, so is the resting period going to be; and again there
will be a creation of a higher order.
And this will go on from eternity to eternity -- creation, de-creation, creation, again decreation
-- but each time the morning is more beautiful. Each dawn is more colorful,
more alive; the birds are singing better, the flowers are bigger, with more fragrance.
And the East has a tremendous courage of accepting the idea that this will go on forever
and forever. There has never been any beginning, and there will be no end.
After enlightenment, you have to disappear. The world is left behind, the body is left
behind, the mind is left behind; just your consciousness, as individuality, is still there.
To go beyond enlightenment is to go beyond individuality and to become universal. This
way, each individual will go on moving into nothingness. And one day, the whole
existence moves into nothingness and a great peace, a great night, a deep, dark womb, a
great awaiting for the dawn.... And it has been happening always, and each time you are
always born on a higher level of consciousness.
Enlightenment is the goal of human beings. But those who are enlightened cannot remain
static; they will have to move, they will have to change. And now they have only one
thing to lose -- themselves.
They have enjoyed everything. They have enjoyed the purity of individuality; now they
have to enjoy the disappearing of individuality. They have seen the beauty of
individuality; now they have to see the disappearance and its beauty, and the silence that
follows, that abysmal serenity that follows.
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