I was talking a great deal yesterday afternoon about the Buddhist attitutde to change, to death, to the transience of the world, and was showing that preachers of all kinds stir people up in the beginning by alarming them about change. Thatâs like somebody, you know, actually raising an alarm, just in the same way as if I want to pay you a visit I ring the doorbell, and then we can come in and I donât need to raise an alarm anymore. So in the same way, it sounds terrible, you see, that everything is going to die and pass away, and here you are, thinking that happiness, sanity, and security consist in clinging on to things which canât be clung to, and in any case there isnât anybody to cling to them. The whole thing is a weaving of smoke.
So thatâs the initial standpoint. But as soon as you really discover this, and you stop clinging to change, then everything is quite different. It becomes amazing. Not only do all your senses become more wide awake, not only do you feel almost that youâre walking on air, but you see, finally, that there is no duality; no difference between the ordinary world and the nirvÄáča world. Theyâre the same world, but what makes the difference is the point of view. And, of course, if you keep identifying yourself with some sort of stable entity that sits and watches the world go by, you donât acknowledge your union, your inseparatability, from everything else that there is. You go by with all the rest of the things. But if you insist on trying to take a permanant stand, on trying to be a permanant witness of the flux, then it grates against you, and you feel very uncomfortable.
But it is a fundamental feeling in most of us that we are such witnesses. We feel that, behind the stream of our thoughts, of our feelings, of our experiences, there is something which is the thinker, the feeler, and the experiencer. Not recognizing that that is itself a thought, feeling, or experiece, and it belongs within and not outside the changing panorama of experience. Itâs what you call a cue signal. In other words, when you telephone, and your telephone conversation is being tape recorded, itâs the law that there shall be a beep every so many seconds. And that beep cues you in to the fact that this conversation is recorded. So, in a very similar way, in our everyday experience thereâs a beep which tells us this is a continuous experience which is mine. Beep!
In the same way, for example, it is a cue signal when a composer arranges some music, and he keeps in it a recurrent theme, but he makes many variations on it. Or, more subtle still, he keeps within it a consistent style, so you know that itâs Mozart all the way along, because that sounds like Mozart. But there isnât, as it were, a constant noise going all the way through to tell you itâs continuousâalthough, in Hindu music, they do have something called the drone. There is, behind all the drums and every kind of singing, something that goes Nnnneeeeeeoooooooiiiinnggg, and it always sounds the note which is the tonic of the scale being used. But in Hindu music, that drone represents the eternal Self, the Brahman, behind all the changing forms of nature. But thatâs only a symbol. And to find out what is eternal you canât make an image of it; you canât hold on to it. And so itâs psychologically more conducive to liberation to remember that the thinkerâor the feeler, or the experiencerâand the experiences are all together. Theyâre all one. But if, out of anxiety, you try to stabilizeâkeep permanentâthe separate observer, you are in for conflict.