So letās go on, then, into our visualization; our imagination. Use your imagination for all itās worth to think yourself into the fact that this whole sense of importance of vitality, of aliveness, of being, is simply a sudden experience which was nothing before it started, and will be nothing after itās over. That is the simplest possible thing you can believe in. It requires no intellectual effort. Nothing. Supposing thatās the way it is.
Now, I repeat, whatās your inside feeling about that? Supposingāletās say you feel sorry. For whom is this sorrow? Who, when itās all over, will there be to feel sorry? You may say, I regret now that this thing is going to come to an end. But when itās come to an end nobody would either regret or be happy about it. That will be that. So, in a way, you can say, Well, this feeling of sorrow that I haveāthat is going to come to an endāis really rather irrelevant, because let me look at the thing from the other direction. Supposing it would never come to an end. In other words, here is this alternation of joy and sorrow, and however happy I am today, Iām always going to feel miserable later on. And then maybe happy again, but then, after that, miserable. And this is never, never going to stop; I just canāt get rid of the damn thing! Well, thatās pretty depressing isnāt it? I mean, when you think it through.
So you say, Well, letās make a compromise between these two possibilities. One is that this compromise is, in other words, that it will disappear altogether, but then itāll start again. Of course, when it starts again it will feel like it does now, which is that it never happened before. So you are always in the same place, just like you feel now.
Letās suppose that the Hindus are right, that the universe lasts for 4,320,000 years, and then it vanishes, and then it starts and it runs for another 4,320,000 years, and then it vanishes, and it does it again. And it does it, and does it, and does it, and does it, and there is no end to this! But fortunately, because of the forgettery every 4,320,000 years, it doesnāt become a totally insufferable bore. There is this blank space, this trough, between the crests of the waves, you see? Now, the Hindus thought about that, and they got tired. And they thought about the possibility of mokį¹£a, āliberation,ā or nirvÄį¹a, from the everlasting cycle of appearing and disappearing.
But then, when they thought that throughāthe Buddhists for example, having really said, Now weāve got the trick. As the Buddha said after his enlightenment, Now I found you out, you who build the house. Iām going to take the house apart. The roof beam is brought down. Desire is the builder of the house. See, I found you. Never again shall you build it. And the Buddhists thought that one over. Thatās crazy, we found a way out of saį¹sÄra, the wheel of birth and death. And somebody one day said, But isnāt that rather selfish? You get yourself out; what about all the other people? Donāt you have any feeling of compassion? Oh yes, they said, of course; we forgot that, didnāt we? Letās come back again and help all these people out! Then they got very sophisticated about it, and they said, Look, if nirvÄį¹a is release from birth and death, then they are opposed. And so, nirvÄį¹a and birth & death go together, and they will have to imply one another. So you are only really released if you see that; if you see that nirvÄį¹a and birth & death are the same thing.
Now, Iāve got to pull a fast one on you. So, every time an incarnation occurs it feels like this one. See? It might be quite different; we might be reincarnated in another universe as beings with an altogether different shape, see? Not at all like human beings. But because we were used to it, we would feel that that was the human shape. We would say, Well, thatās natural, obviously. Obviously, thatās the way things are. So naturally, if you appeared in the form of a spider, you would look around at other spiders and say, Well yes, of course, this is a natural place to be in. This is the human shape. Something thatās not us looks at us and thinks we look perfectly terrible. I mean, imagine how you look to a fish: clumsy, cumbersome, stupid looking thing, whereas a fish is so elegant and graceful and can slide through the water so beautifully. The human beings canāt even swim properly!
So, donāt you see that in every world that comes into beingāor could come into beingāit seems just like it seems now. And every species that you could belong to would seem like this one. It would have its up-end of what is highly intelligent and its low-end of what is not so intelligent. You would be aware of superior forces and inferior forces. Otherwise you wouldnāt have the idea of mastering a situation unless there were situations you couldnāt master. Now, we are not aware of species, of beings, above usāunless you cultivate those forms of psychic awareness where you think youāre in touch with angels, or something of that sort. But the things that appear to be above us are great natural processes. And we think that theyāre rather stupid. Only very tough. Too strong for us. Earthquakes, the elements. Also some little ones, see? The virus is a very troublesome being. And this is where the human being really finds himself at his witsā end in dealing with molecular biology.
So, you know, if the monsters donāt get you, the ministers will. The insects, you see? But at any rate, whatever level youāre on, it always appears to be the same one. Now, weātherefore, naturally, donāt weāwe feel weāre in the middle. We feelāfor example, with the telescopeāthat there is a world greater than us that is infinitely greater. We feelāwith the microscopeāthereās a world below us thatās infinitely smaller, and we seem to stand in the middle. Of course you seem to stand in the middle. Every creature stands in the middle. Because if you stand on a boat in the middle of the ocean and you turn around through an angle of 360 degrees, you will see the same distance in every direction. Thatās because you see. And your sensitivity to sight, or the intensity of light, is the same in every direction. So youāre in the middle. Youāre always in the middle. Where else would you be? In other words, anything that perceives, anywhere, is always in the middle. Anything that grows anywhere is always in the middle. Itās betwixt and between. And the middle always has, therefore, extremes. It has extremes in space: as far west and as far east as you can think; as far on and as far back. And thereās always a beginning, and thereās always an end. Just as there is a left and a right. Or a top and a bottom.