Denise,

Yes - What Sri Bhagwan says is exactly what Osho would have said.

I have said before, but I would say that for an enlightened there is lust but 
there is no pain and suffering. Animal-like, animals have sex but it's not 
mental, it's not in the mind (which Sri Bhagwan referred to as psychological), 
they don't suffer from guilt, shame.


In the absence of beliefs such as sex is sin - sex is seen for what it is just 
a 
biological need. No shame, no guilt, no archetypal guilt of abuser or being 
abused, hence no pain or suffering.



________________________________
From: Denise Evans <dmevans...@yahoo.com>
To: "FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com" <FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Fri, November 11, 2011 11:02:09 PM
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: [Fairfield Life] Can an enlightened person have 
lust?

   
This conversation has been kicked around plenty and is now passe.  However, I'm 
sending this anyway.  I simply could  not understand Sri Bhagavan on the video 
John sent so I decided to transcribe him and then I had to comment below 
because 
it was so non-sensical.  I did understand OSHO - his word choices came across 
more clearly and he was far funnier, I must say.  

Sri Bhagavan and OSHO are trying to say the same thing...are they not?  If one 
pulls way up and doesn't getting confused by the minutia or their personal 
beliefs [such as OSHO stating  that God raped the Virgin Mary and marriage 
inhibits freedom  (paraphrased)]?  

Sri Bhagavan speaks more indirectly.  I think he may be trying to cater to the 
American puritan roots and his ability with the English language may be 
inhibiting clear thought presentation as well. OSHO always has a crazy look in 
his eye and had me ROTFLMAO, if for no other reason than the pure irreverence 
of 
his statements.  


"Word Up"... Who has time for all that  "psychological romance stuff." 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZjAantupsA


SRI BHAGAVAN - transcribed

Question: Does lust exist for an enlightened person?

Answer:  Enlightened people can also have children, like unenlightened people. 
 (Meaning that enlightened people can procreate...obviously - it's a biological 
function.)

If an enlightened person  has got lust, we can talk about lust, biologicallust. 
 In normal people, it is psychological lust. (Biological/psychological...it's 
all interrelated and it's all biological because that's the way the hormones 
work in the body. He's parsing to make a point, which is that enlightened 
people 
can have lust too, so  yes, John, please feel free to sleep with  your wife 
this 
week too :).  He's just trying to create an artificial boundary in order to 
keep 
the enlightened man in a separate category.) 

For the enlightened person, it is more animal like, it is just part of the 
body, 
that's all (I think that perhaps what he is really trying to say is that the 
enlightened man realizes that consciousness encompasses (wrong word choice?) 
the 
body and that the body comes with animal instincts....yes, my kids started 
learning how their body works in elementary school..no big aha moment  here.)

Now,  the unenlightened person can sit alone and be thinking about lust (Yes, 
she can). 

The enlightened man cannot do that because the mind doesn't come up with 
supporting pictures. (Yeah, right - FFL is a good  example of the truth of this 
 
statement.) So, there is no mental lust or psychological lust.  (Again, it's 
all 
the same  thing so yes, there is.  He's also speaking to our American 
puritan-based roots which create self-talk that says..."we know it's wrong 
but we can't help ourselves." ).

But, let us say there is a woman - understanding there can be physical lust. 
 And of course he (the enlightened  man) is not going to violate any law and 
may 
have a relationship with his wife and produce children.  But, this biological 
lust is really really little (Yeah, right)  - and can be a good solution to 
population problems (Please, stop).

But, then let us say there is a person - an enlightened person - and there is a 
woman going there and there is physical lust.   After she moves away from the 
range of vision - it's gone - he cannot think about her (I think he's trying to 
say that an enlightened man stays in the moment).

Lust came, lust went - that's all.  It will not cause a problem (It might for 
the woman...stereotypical male statement).  But, the other (unenlightened man) 
will be thinking of....will go off and chase.....that does not happen for the 
enlightened person (Yeah, like celebrities. Women come to them.)  

After this week of reading all your posts, I might beg to differ on that point, 
but never mind me, I'm an unenlightened, depressed, stressed, fear-based, 
shame-based, slightly overweight, immuno-compromised, middle-aged, woman.  Whew 
- now there's a good visual.   Luckily, my personal version of the 
hopey-changey  
thing is beginning to work for me.  I don't always know what FFL is saying, but 
what I'm hearing is: "It's  o.k., you can be here, we have a lot of  experience 
with realities here, we are experts in management here. Oh, by the way, have 
you 
heard the one about the Raja's and the Domers?"  

OSHO


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ocbZhRQS9I


No transcribing needed.

Freedom-hoppin' starts in pretty good here after the song gets rolling - tee 
hee:  

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2rd8VzNGjL0&feature=related

















 








 

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