Be thankful, you are alive! Kul Bhushan’s thoughts about last year and the present.
OZYMA (no relation to OZY) is a new martial art based on the teachings of Osho, the late controversial Indian guru featured in the Netflix documentary Wild Wild Country, writes Devyani Nighoskar. Published in OZY on December 18, 2020.
Osho says, “There is a way of being in contact with reality without words… Words don’t help, they hinder.”
“As near as I can tell, the only door we have left open to ourselves as a species is a mass-scale awakening,” writes Caitlin Johnstone. Published in SOTT on October 26, 2020.
Deva Dosa contemplates miraculous healings and insights gained from a profound Upasana Meditation, shared globally for the first time via an Internet platform.
In this article, Deva Dosa interviews Master Healer Gyankirti after enjoying three of his recent zoom offerings. (Part 3)
Deva Dosa contemplates miraculous healings and insights from the abundance of Zoom offerings (Part 2).
In the new series, Deva Dosa contemplates miraculous healings and insights from this summer’s abundance of Zoom offerings.
“Online Osho events continue unabated… There is no way even a global pandemic can shut the master up,” writes Samarpan referring also to today’s event with Keerti.
In these times of social isolation due to coronavirus, my mind travels to India, where I once lived swathed in its jasmine perfume, writes Florencia Varas in pressenza.com, Chile. Published on 29 June 2020.
Osho speaks on ‘Listening’; “My success is to give you a real taste so that you can become confident that meditation is not a fiction.”
Satya Vedant is an avid supporter of the OneWorld Meditation program organized by the new Ask Bhagwan app, coming available just as humanity reaches a great turning point after twenty-five centuries.
With the approach of Guru Purnima on July 5, 2020, all are invited to download the free Ask Bhagwan app and participate in OneWorld Meditation.
Existence is full of love and laughter. Let’s not make it serious and morose, suggests Pratiskha Apurv in The Speaking Tree.
Rinzai said, “That which can be heard will not be essential. I have given you the key; silence is the key…”
Osho speaks on the second of three Tantra techniques using imagination; “If you can train your imagination, you can do wonders through it.”
“The priority should be your attainment of spiritual freedom, because political tyrannies come and go,” declares Osho
As the Super Moon of Buddha Purnima 2020 illuminates a planet under lockdown, we celebrate an important update – by Deva Dosa.
Param Srikantia (Swami Deva Anugraha) shows five ways how the COVID-19 situation can also be used as transformative. Published on cleveland.com, May 3, 2020
When we enter into meditation, life is fully awakened and that is living the whole, living in eternity. Then time doesn’t exist, writes Pratiksha Apurv. Published in The Speaking Tree, March 25, 2020.
In answer to a question Osho says, “Hell is when you are all tense, and heaven is when you are all relaxed.”
Via Instagram, Britney confronted online abusers who commented negatively about posting three images of herself wearing the same outfit. Published on Republicworld on April 15, 2020.
To counter inactivity and boredom, you can easily create a meditative situation for yourself and your friends, writes Kul Bhushan.
Staying connected, supporting each other, meditating together and learning about ourselves via the internet – by Punya.
A personal message from Nishant in the time of the coronavirus. “Feel free to share it as you like and also feel free to experiment with it according to your own understanding.”
Osho’s vision: “The new man is an absolute necessity… If we cannot produce a new human being, then humanity will disappear from the earth.”
… to former Indian engineer whose floral headpieces went viral. Published by BBC on February 6, 2020.
Take a quantum jump from a total chaotic mind to a state of bliss and godliness, for it is our very nature, writes Pratiksha Apurv. Published in Speaking Tree on 25 January 2020.
Osho’s answer to: “Would it not make matters much simpler to somehow impress upon our young ones to begin with God?”
With the help of a moving sand art picture, Osho demonstrates the difference between mind and meditation.
The passion that happens out of our conscious choice is what meditation is all about, writes Keerti. Published in The Asian Age on August 6, 2019.
Sneha Bhura reports on new age spiritual cures for 30-something burnouts with money. Published in The Week, on August 3, 2019.
Osho states, “Religion is not something that one gets – one has it, nobody can give it to you. It is your very being.
Keerti writes about the unique prayer meditation to deeply cleanse heart and mind. Published in Asian Age.
Keerti relates an African legend to the wisdom of the heart as defined by Osho. Published in the Deccan Chronicle, May 27, 2019.
Taking inspiration from the story of the mystical bird, we should go back to our source before it’s too late, writes Pratiksha Apurv. Published in The Speaking Tree on May 11, 2019.
The Buddha did not use the old Sanskrit language – he used the Pali language which everybody could understand in those days, writes Keerti. Published in The Asian Age on May 13, 2019.
Osho says not to be concerned about nirvana: “Be concerned about this moment, because this is the only true moment there is, and enter into it.”
Ageh Bharti’s impressions gathered during his visit to the institute last year: “Swami Alok (K. K. Tyagi) has silently done such amazing work that it was a great joy for me to observe the many activities.”
New Johns Hopkins University research found that an ‘encounter with God’ made people less afraid of death and improved their overall moods and outlooks, writes Natalie Rahhal. Published on Mail Online on April 26, 2019.
Thai Buddhist Meditation Master Acharavadee Wongsakon has seen the future and it’s not looking good. Published in The Bali Times on April 19, 2019.