Q: I cannot drop the
habit of chain-smoking. I have tried hard but i have failed always. Is it a sin
to smoke?
A: Don't make a
mountain out of a molehill! Now, what are you really doing when you are
smoking? Just taking some smoke inside your lungs and letting it out. It is a
kind of pranayama -- filthy, dirty, but still a pranayama! You are doing yoga,
in a stupid way. There is only one sin and that is unawareness, and only one
virtue and that is awareness.
I am less interested
in your chain-smoking; I am more interested in your habit. Any habit that
becomes a force, a dominating force over you, is a sin. One should live more in
freedom. Do things not according to habits but according to situations.
Life is continuously
changing but habits are stagnant. The more you are surrounded by habits, the
more you are closed to life. You are not open, you don't have windows. You
don't communicate with life; you go on repeating your habits. That's the
failure of your life.
Habits are all bad
because habit means you are no more the deciding factor. The response is not
coming out of awareness but out of a pattern that you have learned in the past.
If you really want to
do something about your life, dropping smoking is not going to help -- because
I know people who drop smoking; then they start chewing gum or paan; it is the
same. You will do something or other. Your unconsciousness will demand some
activity, some occupation. And it is only a symptom; it is not really the
problem.
Whenever people feel
tense they start smoking. The problem is tension, the problem is emotional
disturbance -- the problem is somewhere else; smoking is just an
occupation.
You have not tried to
be conscious of it; without trying to be conscious you have tried to drop it.
It is not possible. It will come back, because your mind is the same; its needs
are the same, its problems are the same, its anxieties, tensions are the same.
And when those anxieties arise, what will you do? Immediately, mechanically,
you will start searching for the cigarettes.
You may have decided
again and again, and again you have failed -- not because smoking is such a
great phenomenon that you cannot get out of it, but because you are trying from
the wrong end. Rather than becoming aware of the whole situation -- why you
smoke in the first place -- rather than becoming aware of the process of
smoking, you are simply trying to drop it. It is like pruning the leaves of a
tree without cutting the roots.
And my whole concern here is to cut the roots, not to prune the tree. By pruning the leaves and the branches the tree will become thicker, the foliage will become thicker. You will not destroy the tree; you will be helping it, in fact. If you really want to get out of it you will have to look deeper, not into the symptoms but the roots.
I will suggest: smoke
as much as you want to smoke -- just smoke meditatively. If Zen people can
drink tea meditatively, why can't you smoke meditatively? And you will be
surprised: by watching your smoking, slowly smoking will become less and less.
And one day suddenly...it is gone. Ah, This!
Courtesy
Osho International Foundation, www.osho.com
I love this!!
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