The ferryman stepped into the river. The water touched his ankles, then his knees. He turned and said:
“Look at that boat,” the ferryman said. “Once, a Zen master was crossing a lake in an empty boat. Another boat came crashing into him. The master was furious — he shouted, he cursed. But when he looked closer, he saw the boat was empty. His anger vanished instantly. Who was there to be angry at?”
Raghava felt a strange stillness descend.
Buddham Saranam Gacchami is not a journey. It is the end of the traveler. “When you go to the Buddha, you are missing the point. You have to become the Buddha. Not going somewhere — but waking up where you are.” buddham saranam gacchami osho
One evening, Raghava sat by the river, frustrated. “I have taken refuge in the Buddha a million times,” he cried to the sky, “yet I remain the same! Where is the transformation Osho speaks of? Where is the buddha in me?”
The ferryman continued: “You chant Buddham Sharanam Gacchami as if the Buddha is a person outside you. But Osho’s Buddha is not Gautama the prince. Osho’s Buddha is your own awareness when the ‘I’ disappears. To go for refuge to the Buddha means to drop the ego — the one who thinks ‘I am going, I am seeking, I am suffering.’”
And in that emptiness, for the first time, he understood: The ferryman stepped into the river
Raghava sat alone on the bank. For the first time, he did not chant. He simply breathed. The river flowed. The moon rose. And somewhere inside him, a boat that had been full of noise and ambition and fear — suddenly became empty.
He pointed to an old wooden boat tied to the shore. It was empty, rocking gently with the waves.
Just then, an old ferryman approached, his face weathered but eyes sparkling like a child’s. He carried no scriptures, no malas. He simply smiled. “Once, a Zen master was crossing a lake in an empty boat
“So… what should I do?” he whispered.
“Next time you chant Buddham Saranam Gacchami , do not send your words outward. Let them fall inward — like a pebble into still water. Let the sound dissolve the chanter. Let ‘Raghava’ disappear. Then you will see: there is no one going anywhere. There is only Buddham — the awakened quality — already here, already home. That is the refuge. Not a shelter from suffering, but the realization that the sufferer never existed.”
Raghava frowned. “I, the seeker, go to the Buddha, the awakened one.”
With that, the ferryman waded deeper into the river and vanished beneath the dark water — leaving no ripple, no trace.
The ferryman laughed gently. “That is the first mistake. Osho says: When you go to the Buddha, you are two. But the truth is not two. There is no seeker and no destination. There is only the seeking itself — empty, silent, aware.”