These
are the stages a seeker moves through: the student, the
disciple, the devotee. The fourth is also there but it does not belong
to the seeker, it belongs to the one who has arrived; that’s why I am not
counting it. The seeker is on the path. The student is not aware that he is a
student. He may think he is a disciple, he may think he is a devotee; his
functioning is absolutely unconscious.
I am
reminded of a case — it happened in the life of a Sufi mystic, Junnaid. A man
came; he wanted to be a disciple. Junnaid looked at him for a long time. The
man started feeling a little nervous: Why is he looking so long and so
silently?
Finally
Junnaid said, “To be a disciple is very difficult.”
The
man said, “Then I am ready to be a devotee.”
Junnaid
said, “That is even more difficult. The only thing that is not difficult here
is to be a master.”
The
man said, “If that is the case I am ready to be the master.”
Junnaid
told his disciples and devotees, “This is a case of unconsciousness. He is not
even a student, but the longing is to be a master if it is easier.”
The
student comes almost accidentally. Perhaps he reads a book, perhaps a friend
talks to him and he becomes curious. But curiosity is so superficial; it cannot
make you committed and devoted for a long journey. It is very momentary. Hence
the student is not accepted in the mystery schools. He is too unripe; he has to
wander a few days more or perhaps a few lives more before he can be accepted by
a master as a disciple.
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