Osho's Philosophy
Osho's Philosophy
Osho's Philosophy
Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh and later as Osho was an Indian spiritual teacher. He lived in India and in other
countries including, for a period the United States, and was held centrally by the Osho-Rajneesh movement, a
controversial spiritual and philosophical movement.
In the Western world, "Orange People" and Rajneeshees were popular terms to designate Rajneesh followers, the
former because of the colour of their clothes, which were meant to be the colour of the sky at dawn.
Osho's philosophy
Osho (Rajneesh) claimed that the greatest values in life are (in no specific order) love, meditation and laughter, and
that the highest grace in life was in experiencing spiritual enlightenment. This enlightenment is described as being
the normal state of being for all that makes up the cosmos, but one is distracted from realizing that one is
experiencing it - particularly by the human activity of thought, as well as by emotional ties to societal expectations,
and consequent fears and inhibitions.
He extracted and expounded philosophies from various spiritual sources. He was a prolific speaker both in Hindi
and English on various spiritual traditions including those of Buddha, Krishna,Guru Nanak, Jesus, Socrates, Zen
masters, Hassidism, Sufism and many others. He also took pains to ensure no "system of thought" would define him,
since no philosophy can fully express the truth. His, though by no means uniquely his, was more a "philosophy of no
philosophy".
An experienced orator, he used his skills to convey his message, but insisted that the only reason he kept on talking
was to convince his listeners to start on a path of meditation.
He was often called the "sex guru" after some speeches in the late 1960s on sexuality which scandalised an orthodox
society. These were later compiled under the title From Sex to Superconsciousness. According to him, "For Tantra
everything is holy, nothing is unholy", and all repressive sexual morality was self-defeating, since one could not
transcend sex without experiencing it thoroughly and consciously.
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Osho on meditation
According to Osho, meditation is a state beyond mind. It is not concentration. It is not about spiritual thoughts; it is a
state of thoughtlessness. It is something that can just happen, it is a state that one can be in, it is not something that
one can do. But he said that it is very difficult for modern man to just sit and be in meditation, so he devised some
active meditation techniques that naturally take one into meditation. These techniques allow a person to unburden by
expressing whatever is repressed in him.
Some of these preparatory exercises can also be found in western psychological therapies (i.e. gestalt therapy), such
as altered breathing, gibberish, laughing or crying. His most significant meditation techniques are referred to as
Active Meditations, such as "Dynamic Meditation", "Kundalini Meditation", "Nadabrahma", "Nataraj", and are quite
demanding physically.
He also reintroduced several traditional meditation techniques, reducing them to their most minimal expression,
stripping them of ritual and tradition, and retaining the most therapeutic parts. He also supported the theory that,
given sufficient practice, the meditative state can be achieved and maintained while performing everyday tasks.
Furthermore, enlightenment is nothing but being continuously in a meditative state.
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Biographical notes
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The Commune
In 1969 a group of his disciples established a foundation to support his work and allowed him to drop his university
job. They settled in an apartment in Mumbai where he gave daily discourses and received visitors. The number and
frequency of visitors soon became too much for the place, overflowing the apartment and bothering the neighbours.
A much larger apartment was found on the ground floor (so the visitors would not need to use the elevator, a matter
of conflict with the former neighbours).
On September 26, 1970 he initiated his first disciple or sannyasin at an outdoor meditation camp, one of the large
gatherings where he lectured and guided group meditations.
Still the new and bigger apartment proved insufficient and the climate of Mumbai was deemed very bad for Osho's
health, so a new place had to be found. On the 21st anniversary of his enlightenment a caravan of cars departed from
the Mumbai apartment to the newly purchased property in Koregaon Park, in the city of Pune, a four hour trip from
Mumbai. Pune had been the secondary residence of many wealthy families from Mumbai because of the cooler
climate (Mumbai lies in a coastal wetland, hot and damp, Pune is inland and much higher so it is drier and cooler).
The two adjoining houses and 6 acres of land had known better times but in little time the nucleus of an Ashram
started to grow and those two buildings are still at the heart of the present day Osho International Commune. This
stable and ample space allowed for the regular audio and video recording of his discourses and later printing for
worldwide distribution, which allowed him to reach far larger audiences internationally.
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Back in Pune
On January 19, 1990, four years after his arrest, Osho died, with "heart failure" being the publicly reported cause.
Osho claimed that his rapid health decline leading to his death was caused by his poisoning with the element
thallium by US authorities while he was in prison. He claimed a plot led by the CIA and Ronald Reagan to
assassinate him had been carried out due to their fear of Osho's controversial and counter-cultural teachings
combined with his powerful ability to influence people. There has never been any evidence to support this claim,
which is contradicted by the fact that thallium poisoning causes dramatic hair loss within one week of exposure.
Osho never experienced any abnormal hair loss and he died with a full beard.
Osho was chronically ill most of his adult life and he was exceptionally sensitive to smells and chemicals, a
condition known as "multiple chemical sensitivity." Those wishing to meet him were first sniffed by helpers to make
sure they were not wearing perfume. It was widely reported that he was addicted to the prescription drug Valium in
the 1980s and was a heavy user of nitrous oxide gas. On the CBS television show 60 Minutes, Ma Anand Sheela
claimed that Rajneesh took sixty milligrams of Valium every day. When questioned by journalists about this
allegation, however, Osho categorically denied it, adding that Sheela was in no position to know what medication he
was given, this being a matter between him and his personal physician.
In a 1998 preface to Books I Have Loved, Osho's personal dentist, Swami Devageet, states that Osho dictated three
books under the influence of nitrous oxide. They were Glimpses of a Golden Childhood, Notes of a Madman, and
Books I Have Loved. Referring to his own nitrous oxide use, Rajneesh himself stated that "Actually oxygen and
nitrogen are basic elements of existence. They can be of much use, but for reasons the politicians have been against
chemicals of all kinds, all drugs."
After the Rajneeshpuram commune was abandoned, it was discovered that Rajneesh had installed nitrous oxide
spigots in his home by his bedside. This was widely reported in newspapers and verified first hand by the FBI and
former Oregon Congressman Jim Weaver, who wrote the following in a newspaper article.
A few years later, I went through the abandoned city of Rajneeshpuram and saw things
that were almost unbelievable. Ma Anand Sheela's headquarters, a group of mobile
homes pieced together, was a hive of secret doors and hidden tunnels, her private room a
command post with electronic listening gear tapped into every room in the development.
The Bhagwan's parquet-paneled quarters had nitrogen oxide spigots by his bedside, and
was surrounded by huge bathrooms with multiple showers.
Osho was 58 years old when he died. His ashes were placed in a reconstructed meditation hall, at his last home
place, his Ashram in Pune, India. The epitaph reads, "OSHO. Never Born, Never Died. Only Visited this Planet
Earth between Dec 11 1931 - Jan 19 1990."
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