A collection of quotes and teachings on Lord Krishna by Osho.
There are thousand statements about who Krishna is andKrishna belies all the statements. How does one understand a man with so many sides to him? No statement however severe and astute can wholly encompass Krishna 's wholeness. It lies in the fact that he has no personality of his own, that he is not a person, an individual – he is existence itself.
There are thousand statements about who Krishna is and
You can say that he is like a mirror; he just mirrors everything that comes before him…and when you see yourself mirrored in him, you think Krishna is like you. But the moment you move away from him, he is empty again. That's leadership. One wants to see in Krishna what one wants to see in him. Nothing more nothing less.
It is really arduous to understand Krishna. It is easy to understand
that a man should run away from the world if he wants to find peace, but
it is really difficult to accept that one can find peace in the thick
of the marketplace. It is understandable that a man can attain to purity
of mind if he breaks away from his attachments, but it is really
difficult to realize that one can remain unattached and innocent in the
very midst of relationships and attachments, that one can remain calm
and still live at the very center of the cyclone. There is no difficulty
in accepting that the flame of a candle will remain steady and still in
a place well secluded from winds and storms, but how can you believe
that a candle can keep burning steadily even in the midst of raging
storms and hurricanes? So it is difficult even for those who are close
to Krishna to understand him.
Krishna is not a seeker. It would be wrong to call him a seeker. He is a siddha, an adept, an accomplished performer of all life’s arts. And what he says in this siddha state, in this ultimate state of mind, may seem to you to be egoistic, but it is not. The difficulty is that Krishna has to use the same linguistic “I” as you do, but there is a tremendous difference in connotation between his “I” and yours. When you say “I” it means the one imprisoned inside your body, but when Krishna says it he means that which permeates the whole cosmos. Hence he has the courage to tell Arjuna, “Give up everything else and come to my feet.” If it were the same “I” as yours – a prisoner of the body – it would be impossible for him to say a thing like this. And Arjuna would have been hurt if Krishna’s “I” were as petty as yours. Arjuna would have immediately retorted, “What are you saying? Why on earth should I surrender to you?” Arjuna would have really been hurt, but he was not.