It happened that some photographer took a picture of
Ramakrishna. That was his first picture and the photographer was very happy. He
brought the large framed picture to present to Ramakrishna who was sitting with
his disciples. He took the picture in his hand and kissed the feet in the
picture. The photographer could not believe it! Is this man sane or insane? His
own picture, and he is kissing the feet!
Vivekananda, his
chief disciple, was sitting by the side. He said, "Paramahansadeva, what are you doing? This is your own picture. Have
you seen it or not?" He thought he had not looked at the picture – Just
that the man had given it to him, and he must have thought it was some god’s
picture, so he had kissed it.
Ramakrishna said, "Is it so? Let me look." He looked
and he said, "Yes, it is my picture," and he kissed the feet again!
Vivekananda said,
"Now this is too much."
Ramakrishna said,
"I am not kissing my own feet. This is a picture of a state, it has
nothing to do with me. Just look at the picture," he said, "It is a
picture of a certain state. The body is just the outer lines, but look into the
eyes, look into the face. And I remember perfectly where I was when this
picture was taken: I was in samadhi, so it is a picture of samadhi. And I say
to you that only this picture should be distributed, no other picture."
So only that picture
hangs in the houses of people who worship Ramakrishna, because that picture was
worshipped by Ramakrishna himself. It is absurd logically, but just a little
bit of patience and you can see the point. It is a picture of a state. It is
immaterial whether Ramakrishna was in that state or Mahavira was in that state
or Buddha was in that state. It is immaterial – what matters is that
consciousness.
Good music, good
poetry, can raise your consciousness. They can create the situation for the
entry into the third. Very few musicians have been there very few poets, very
few painters, and very few sculptors are capable of creating such artifacts
that can give you a resonance inside you.
OSHO
From Misery to
Enlightenment, Chapter #5
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