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“A tidal wave arises in the ocean – from where is it coming? And soon it disperses back in the ocean. The source of your coming and the source of your going are absolutely the same.” Yakusan experienced his awakening with the master Sekito, and later, “When so many people became enlightened under Yakusan, the whole mountain where he was collecting all these seekers must have become a paradise. So many enlightened people…the whole mountain must have been rejoicing and dancing.” In this series of talks Osho uses small anecdotes about the Zen masters to gently take us on the search for the inner buddha. “My concern is somehow to bring you to an awakening.” Osho says: “My effort is so totally different and diametrically opposite to all the founders of religions, that there is no way to compare me with anybody. I am a majority of a single individual, and I want all of you to be a majority of single individuals. “You are enough unto yourself. You don’t need anything. You need only a deep inner search.”
“A tidal wave arises in the ocean – from where is it coming? And soon it disperses back in the ocean. The source of your coming and the source of your going are absolutely the same.” Yakusan experienced his awakening with the master Sekito, and later, “When so many people became enlightened under Yakusan, the whole mountain where he was collecting all these seekers must have become a paradise. So many enlightened people…the whole mountain must have been rejoicing and dancing.” In this series of talks Osho uses small anecdotes about the Zen masters to gently take us on the search for the inner buddha. “My concern is somehow to bring you to an awakening.” Osho says: “My effort is so totally different and diametrically opposite to all the founders of religions, that there is no way to compare me with anybody. I am a majority of a single individual, and I want all of you to be a majority of single individuals. “You are enough unto yourself. You don’t need anything. You need only a deep inner search.”
Weight | 0.5 kg |
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Talks on the Great Mystic Ashtavakra Osho talks on the famous dialogue between the ancient Indian mystic Ashtavakra and King Janek. By the end of the dialogue, King Janak is enlightened. Man has many scriptures, but none are comparable to the Gita of Ashtavakra. Before it the Vedas pale, the Upanishads are a mere whisper. Even the Bhagavadgita does not have the majesty found in the Ashtavakra Samhita it is simply unparalleled. The most important thing is that neither society, nor politics, nor any other institution of human life had any influence on the statements of Ashtavakra. There are no other statements anywhere that are so pure, transcendental, and beyond time and space. Osho
In these delightful and playful talks, Osho introduces the mystery, the wonder and the emptiness that is Zen. He shows how verses by the fourteenth Zen master, Ikkyu, can stir the heart, touch the being and help our transformation.
Osho and Ikkyu’s whole message is about how to experience the essence of emptiness: that blissful state of no-mind where all old conditionings are gone and man is free just to be himself. As Osho speaks of Ikkyu, and answers people’s questions, he is also speaking of himself. As he speaks of who Ikkyu is, he is revealing more about himself. Osho gives a fresh, new understanding of himself, and shows how each person can find the way to light his own path.
It provides 144 meditation techniques to transform the quality of your work and life.