To meditate, Buddha left the city and sought isolation. Life in the city didn’t give him the space to be himself. But when he realized his potential, he returned to the city—to share what he had found in isolation.
The city’s hectic pace may compel an escape into solitude, where the seeker’s individuality can blossom. But this does no mean that it can blossom only in the jungle, not in a city say Delhi. It can—if we know how to meditate in the marketplace! Osho taught us how...
In a beautiful poem, Tagore says: “After Enlightenment, Buddha returns home. His wife asks him: ‘What you attained in the jungle—was it not possible to attain it here? Why leave home, me, your child?’” Buddha was silent.
Mystic Kabir says: “Kabira khada bazaar mein.” Yes, Kabir comes to the bazaar and urges people to gather courage, burn their houses of imagination, transform their lives… They can do so by meditation and following the path of love. Meditation blossoms into love, yielding a spontaneous sharing, like a flower shares its fragrance, unconditionally. Love is unconditional if rooted in meditation.
Ordinary relationships are based on conditional love. It’s a barter—you give me something, I give you something. And we keep calculating whether we profited or not! This calculation is not bliss but mundane mathematics. Real joy comes when one shares love without any conditions.
The marketplace can corrupt the minds of those who get lost in it. We need enlightened people like Kabir and Osho to remind us to stay in it yet rise—just like a lotus in mud. And you won’t find a better place than Delhi, with all its political tangles, cutthroat competition, mazes of ambition… It’s a real challenge to meditate in such an atmosphere.
One need not escape into isolation. One can meditate in the world itself, it one is intelligent. Osho suggests Vipassana (watching your breath and the gaps in breathing) as a meditation to be practiced amidst worldly activity. You are eating: Eat on but be attentive to the gap. You are walking: Walk on but be attentive to the gap. You are about to sleep: Lie down, let sleep come but mind the gap!
Don’t let your activity distract your mind. Exist in two layers—doing and being, circumference and center. And as you work on the periphery, attend on the core as well. Your activity will become an act, as if you’re playing a part. Let your entire life become a long drama. Become an actor playing roles, but constantly centred in the gap. Life is just a role, given to you by society, by circumstance, by culture, by family, by tradition, by nation, by situation...
Play on and focus on the gap between breaths. Let life move on, along the periphery, while you stay in the gap, in the core, in the center. This is the way to being a Buddha in the bazaar.
- Swami Chaitanya Keerti




