'That what I want, basically, what I really want, is what you want. And I don't know what you want. Surprise me'.
But that's the kinship between \"I\" and \"thou\". So when I ask, I go right down to the question, which we started with: \"What do I want?\"
The answer is \"I don't know\".
When Bodhidharma was asked, \"Who are you?\" which is another form of the same question, he said \"I don't know\". Planting flowers to which the butterflies come, Bodhidharma says \"I know not\".
I don't know what I want.
And when you don't know what you want, you reach the state of desirelessness. When you *really* don't know... you see, there's a beginning stage of not knowing, and there's an ending stage of not knowing.
In the beginning stage, you don't know what you want because you haven't thought about it, or you've only thought superficially.
Then when somebody forces you to think about it and go through it, you say, \"Yeah, I think I'd like this, I think I'd like that, I think I'd like the other\". That's the middle stage.
Then you get beyond that, and say \"Is that what I really want?\" In the end you say, \"No, I don't think that's it... I might be satisfied with it for a while, and I wouldn't turn my nose up at it, but it's not really what I want\".
Why don't you really know what you want?
Two reasons, that you don't really know what you want.
Number one: You have it.
Number two: You don't know yourself. Because you never can. The godhead is never the object of its own knowledge, just as a knife doesn't cut itself, fire doesn't burn itself, life doesn't illumine itself. It's always an endless mystery to itself. \"I don't know\".
And this \"I don't know\", uttered in the infinite interior of the spirit, this \"I don't know\", is the same thing as \"I love\", \"I let go\", \"I don't try to force or control\". It's the same thing as humility.
And so the Upanishads say, \"If you think that you understand Brahman, you do not understand. You have yet to be instructed further. If you know that you do not understand, then you truly understand, for the Brahman is unknown to those who know it, and known to those who know it not'.
And the principle is that any time you, as it were, voluntarily let up control, in other words, cease to cling to yourself, you have an access to power. Because you're wasting energy all the time in self-defense, trying to manage things, trying to force things to conform to your will.
The moment you stop doing that, that wasted energy is available. And therefore you are, in that sense, having that energy available, you are one with the divine principle. You have the energy! When you're trying, however, to act as if you are god, that is to say, you don't trust anybody and you're the dictator and you have to keep everybody in line, you lose the divine energy, because what you're doing is simply defending yourself.
So then the principle is: the more you give it away, the more it comes back. Now you say, 'I don't have the courage to give it away. I'm afraid'.
And you can only overcome that by realizing, you better give it away, because there's no way of holding on to it. The meaning of the fact that everything is dissolving constantly, that we're all falling apart, we're all in the process of constant death, and that - 'The Worldly Hope men set their Hearts upon / Turns Ashes - or it prospers; and / Like Snow upon the Desert's dusty Face / Lighting a little Hour or two - is gone
all that Omar Khayyam jazz. You know,
'The cloud-capped towers, the gorgeous palaces, the great globe itself, I, all which it inherit -- shall dissolve, and like th