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Osho | Discourses

Osho is dangerous. Not because he advocates violence (he is radically against it), but because he destroys your comfort zones. He tells you that your saint is just a repressed sinner. He tells you that your priest is selling a god he has never met. He tells you that your morality is often just cowardice dressed in good manners.

If you want a spiritual path that gives you rules to follow and guarantees of heaven, do not read Osho. He will laugh at your heaven.

Because in the end, Osho’s only message is this: osho discourses

Osho never prepared a single lecture. For nearly fifteen years in Pune, India, he spoke daily to thousands of seekers from around the globe. He would walk to the podium—often draped in a flowing white robe, sipping tea or smoking a cigarette—and simply respond . He responded to the energy of the moment, the unasked question in the heart of the crowd, the ancient silence trapped inside a modern problem.

Find a recording of the Book of Wisdom or The Mustard Seed . Don’t analyze. Just sit. Let his voice—that unique, rhythmic, hypnotic tone—wash over you. Let him be a thorn to remove a thorn. Use his words to reach a place where no words exist. Osho is dangerous

Listen to the discourse. Laugh at the jokes. Cry at the truth. And then, when the recording stops, sit in the silence that remains. That silence is the real teaching.

His discourses are a deconstruction of the ego. Using wit that cuts like a surgeon’s scalpel, he targets our sacred cows: religion, politics, family, education, and even spirituality itself. “Mind is a mechanism to avoid reality. It is the only barrier between you and existence.” When you read or watch Osho, he isn’t trying to convince you that he is right. He is trying to shake you awake. He uses paradox as a laxative for the constipated intellect. He wants you to hit a point of confusion so profound that the mind finally gives up—and you simply see . He tells you that your priest is selling

To listen to an Osho discourse is not to “learn” in the conventional sense. It is not about accumulating information to impress your neighbor or win a debate. In fact, if you approach his talks with a logical mind hungry for data, you will leave frustrated. He contradicts himself on purpose. He praises the Buddha one moment and scorns the Buddhists the next. He tells a joke that has no punchline, only a mirror.

Beyond the Mind: Diving into the Uncharted Waters of Osho’s Discourses