“The balance is needed because it seems that there is too much work, and not enough of the pleasure of life,” writes Subhan
“Surrender is only when even if you are right, you can give in,” explains Osho about work in the ashram.
A short, but hilarious, excerpt from Radha’s book, Tantra: A Way of Living and Loving – a day at work on the Big Muddy Ranch.
Osho answers a question about why he has come to earth, and says, “My whole message is to see the truth, to see the hell that ego creates in the name of perfection, uniqueness – and to let it drop.”
Tonight Sagar came to darshan, telling Osho that Laxmi (the secretary of the organization) has asked him to leave the ashram. He asked Osho if he were really to leave or if this was a message to indicate that he should apply himself more to the work.
Subhan explains his four-step approach which has helped himself and many others find the work they love.
In view that Osho Chairs are now being established, we are publishing a discourse Osho gave on December 23, 1967 in Lonavala, India.
Life is like one big joke, and the reason it is worth living is its very unpredictability, the unknown element, writes Amrit Sadhana in the Deccan Chronicle, India, on September 21, 2016.
BBC Two documentary about a young British family’s move to Germany to find out how it is the Germans can work fewer hours than the Greeks and still live in Europe’s economic powerhouse.
Why do we wait so restlessly for the workday to end and for the weekend to come? And this is not only true in India. Ashish Kothari writes on Scroll.in; published on SOTT, June 17, 2016
Beloved Osho,
The Sufis say that a person has a purpose in life and you need to find out what your purpose is. This question keeps coming up for me now that I am not in a commune any longer.
Shaida talks to Punya about her new business that organises events and meditation retreats in Tulum, Mexico, and further afield.
Sadhana writes about her visit to ‘Ant Financial’ in Hangzou, China, a company that takes the ant as its role model. Published in The Asian Age on October 4, 2015.
Naina interviewed Delhi-based friends working in the mainstream media, asking them how they manage to maintain a sane and healthy lifestyle.
Ageh Bharti remembers Osho explaining the nature of the work to volunteers at the meditation camp in Nargol, Gujarat, in 1968.
Meet the workers with no plans to clock off. Published in The Guardian on August 1, 2015.
Published on March 15, 2013, the Daily Post, India, writes about Pratiksha, her life and work as Osho’s sannyasin and her next exhibition.
Rajen’s thoughts about money and it’s value, ‘asking the right questions’ and ‘working while drinking coffee’
Sagarpriya describes the Conscious Living course which she gives at the beginning of the season at the Osho Miasto Centre in Italy