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Sadness as a Meditation
by
Osho
Sadness
can become a very enriching experience. You have
to work on it. It is easy to escape from your
sadness — and all relationships ordinarily are
escapes; one simply goes on avoiding it. And it
is always there underneath... the current
continues. Even in relationship it erupts many
times. Then one tends to throw the
responsibility on the other, but it is not the
real thing. It is your loneliness, your own
sadness. You have not settled with it yet, so it
will erupt again and again.
You can escape in work. You can escape in some
occupation, in relationship and society, this
and that, in traveling, but it is not going to
go way, because it is part of your being.
Every man is born alone — in the world, but
alone; comes through the parents, but alone. And
every man dies alone, again moves out of the
world alone. And between these two lonelinesses
we go on deceiving and fooling ourselves. It is
good to take courage and enter into this
loneliness. However hard and difficult it may
look in the beginning, it pays tremendously.
Once you settle with it, once you start enjoying
it, once you feel it not as sadness but as
silence, once you understand that there is no
way to escape, you relax.
Nothing can be done about it, so why not enjoy
it? Why not go into it deeply and have a taste
of it, see what it is? Why be unnecessarily
afraid? If it is going to be there and it is a
fact — existential, not accidental — then why
not come to terms with it? Why not move into it
and see what it is?
Whenever you feel sad, sit silently and allow
sadness to come; don’t try to escape from it.
Make yourself as sad as you can. Don’t avoid it
— that’s the one thing to remember. Cry, weep...
have the whole taste of it. Cry to death... fall
down on the earth... roll — and let it go by
itself. Don't force it to go; it will go,
because nobody can remain in a permanent mood.
When it goes you will be unburdened, absolutely
unburdened, as if the whole gravitation has
disappeared and you can fly, weightless. That is
the moment to enter yourself. First bring
sadness. The ordinary tendency is not to allow
it, to find some ways and means so that you can
look somewhere else — to go to the restaurant,
to the swimming pool, meet friends, read a book
or go to a movie, play a guitar — to do
something, so that you can be engaged and you
can put your attention somewhere else.
This is to be remembered — when you are feeling
sad, don’t lose the opportunity. Close the
doors, sit down, and feel as sad as you can, as
if the whole world is just a hell. Go deep into
it... sink into it. Allow every sad thought to
penetrate you, every sad emotion to stir you.
And cry and weep and say things — say them
loudly, there is nothing to worry about.
So first live sadness for a few days, and the
moment that momentum of sadness goes, you will
feel very calm, peaceful — as one feels after a
storm. In that moment sit silently and enjoy the
silence that is coming on its own. You have not
brought it; you were bringing sadness. When
sadness goes, in the wake, silence settles.
Listen to that silence. Close your eyes. Feel
it... feel the very texture of it... the
fragrance. And if you feel happy, sing, dance.

Copyright © Osho
International Foundation
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About
The Author
Osho is one of the best-known and most provocative spiritual teachers of
the 20th century. Beginning in the 1970s he captured the attention of
young people from the West who wanted to experience meditation and
transformation. More than a decade after his death in 1990, the influence of
his teachings continues to expand, reaching seekers of all ages in virtually
every country of the world. . © Osho
International Foundation. All rights
reserved. For more information, visit www.osho.org
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Recommended book:

"And
Now, and Here : On Death, Dying and Past Lives”
by Osho
Purchase the book. |
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