🔘 Take It Easy, Vol - 1 :
In these delightful and playful talks, available for the first time in one volume, Osho introduces the mystery, the wonder, and the emptiness that is Zen. He uses the poetry of one of the most outrageous Zen masters, Ikkyu, to show the ways and methods a Zen master uses to permanently transform, rather than simply inform. 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.
🔘 Take It Easy, Vol - 2 :
Through his commentaries on Zen master Ikkyu's verses, Osho shatters many of the cherished beliefs of man, and the meditator too. Togetherness, aloneness, the illusoriness of love and of meditation; the difficulty of understanding the simple; the difference between information and experience... There is something here for every intelligent reader!
🔘 Tantra Vision, Vol - 1 :
An absorbing book about the relationship between Saraha, an affluent young Brahmin, and a lower-cast arrowsmith woman - he as disciple, and she as his Tantric master. In Osho's understanding Tantra is one of the greatest of man's visions, a religion which respects rather than destroys individuality. Alternately speaking on the sutras of Saraha and answering seekers' questions, Osho describes what he calls the "Tantra map of inner consciousness," including the "four seals" or locks that open as couples move higher in meditation.
🔘 The Tantra Vision, Vol - 2 :
An absorbing book about the relationship between Saraha, an affluent young Brahmin, and a lower-cast arrowsmith woman - he as disciple, and she as his Tantric master. In Osho's understanding Tantra is one of the greatest of man's visions, a religion which respects rather than destroys individuality. Alternately speaking on the sutras of Saraha and answering seekers' questions, Osho describes what he calls the "Tantra map of inner consciousness," including the "four seals" or locks that open as couples move higher in meditation.
🔘Tantra : The Supreme Understanding:
An all-time best-seller, which takes flight from the obscure song of the Tibetan master, Tilopa, to explain in simple language the mystical insights hidden in Tantra. A classic that explains Tantra as a method to expand man's consciousness.
Osho refers to these ancient discourses as the most profound insights into nature - not tenets of a doctrine or philosophical treatises but existential insights. Of their originator, the famous 6th-century scholar Ko Hsuan, nothing is known except that he is an enlightened master of the caliber of Lao Tzu. Osho explains why Tao is called "the golden gate" - to indicate that God is not a person but an entrance, an opening that happens internally when the seeker is ready.
🔘 Tao - The Golden Gate, Vol - 2 :
Osho uses jokes to provoke greater awareness. Responses to questions on the dilemma of moden man address conditioning, prejudice, and strategies that close us to Existence.
🔘 Tao - The Pathless Path, Vol - 1 :
The Book of Lieh Tzu is attributed to a 5th-century Chinese mystic. It is not known if Lieh Tzu ever existed, or if the parables attributed to him were written by one person or many. More significant than their origin are the parables themselves, and the way in which Osho takes them in hand and opens the door to the mysteries they contain. In the course of his commentary and his answers to questions, Osho speaks of Beckett and Buddha, Gurdjieff and Hitler, Einstein and Confucius. He also talks about psychotherapy and Taoism, and wehther Taoism is a form of escapism.
🔘 Tao - The Pathless Path, Vol - 2 :
In these talks on Lieh Tzu, Osho calls Tao "the pathless path" because, he says, it has a different quality - the quality of freedom, anarchy and chaos. "Anything that is an imposition, a discipline, an order imposed externally only serves to distract the seeker from his path." In addition to commenting on these stories attributed to Lieh Tzu, Osho answers questions about marriage, intimacy, the possibility of Tantra merging with Tao, and the relationship of Tao to the notion of "doing your own thing."
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🔘 Tao - The Three Treasures, Vol - 1 :
🔘 Tao - The Three Treasures, Vol - 1 :
Osho recounts how Lao Tzu, at the age of 90, was leaving for the Himalayas to spend his final days. Until this time he had never written down his insights, but at the border a guard (who was also his disciple) imprisoned the mystic and refused to release him until he wrote down something of what he had come to know. That is how this unique text, the Tao Te Ching, was born. Osho comments on this classic text from his uniquely fresh perspective, and also answers questions about the I Ching, growth and spirituality in the context of Tao, the concept of sudden versus gradual enlightenment, and much more.
🔘 Tao - The Three Treasures, Vol -2 :
Osho's affinity with this ancient Chinese mystic is such that he says when he speaks on Lao Tzu he is speaking as if on himself. So clearly does Lao Tzu reflect the unity of opposites, life's absurdities, its ordinariness, and the beauty of that ordinariness, that Osho sees in him a "spokesman for life." In this volume Osho comments on the verses of Lao Tzu and answers questions from disciples and other seekers - Why did you choose a male form as your last one? Please explain the difference between discipline and control. What happens when an enlightened being dissolves into the cosmos? And more.
🔘 Tao - The Three Treasures, Vol - 3 :
Osho's commentary on the timeless verses of Lao Tzu is set in poetic format, as are his responses to questions from disciples and other seekers. Questions include: Isn't the search for enlightenment selfish? How much patience is needed? Is there really nothing we can do? Do all beings eventually find their way to enlightenment? What is the difference between innocence and ignorance?
🔘 Tao - The Three Treasures, Vol - 4 :
Lao Tzu speaks of his "three treasures": Love... Never too much... Never be the first in the world. Osho uses this exquisite text to deliver some of his most potent words on love - not as an emotion but as the subtlest form of energy, the substratum of all energy and the essence of life itself. He also speaks on love in relation to sex, fear, the family, science, art and prayer; the mind as a biocomputer; the difficulty of comprehending the simple; and the problem of identification with the body. A treasure trove of Osho's wisdom.
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🔘 That Art Thou :
🔘 That Art Thou :
- These discourses were given during the first meditation camps in which Osho spoke in English. Each of the book's 51 short chapters covers a different theme based on the sutra being discussed, and translates its ancient wisdom into the language of today. The book includes photographs never before released, of Osho and the meditation camps, and the complete text of his instructions as he leads Dynamic Meditation, one of the most profound techniques available to seekers today.
- "More than any other book I know, this book connects what the Upanishads scripturalize about spiritual experience with living techniques of meditation that lead to realizing that experience. The Upanishads talk about ultimate wisdom, Bhagwan tells you how to live it." (Robert. E. Gussner, flap-text.)
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- 🔘 Theologia Mystica :
- Osho says of these letters by Dionysius, first bishop of Athens, to his disciple Timothy: "His whole book is written with a disguise, as if it is a treatise on theology; mysticism is just somewhere by the side, secondary, not primary. Hence the name Theologica Mystica - as if mysticism is only a consequence of getting deep into the world of theology. Just the reverse is the case."
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- 🔘 This Very Body The Buddha :
- Of the "song" of the 17th-century mystic, Hakuin, Osho comments,
- "It is a very small song, but a great gift. This is a song of meditation. If meditation is without a song, it is dull and dead. You will find this song and its meaning only when you are singing and dancing, when the music of life has overtaken you."
- The first words of this book:
- "MY BELOVED ONES: I love you. Love is my message -- let it be your message too. Love is my color and my climate. To me, love is the only religion. All else is just rubbish, all else is nothing but mind-churning dreams. Love is the only substantial thing in life, all else is illusion. Let love grow in you and God will be growing on its own accord. If you miss love you will miss God and all.
- There is no way to God without love. God can be forgotten -- if love is remembered, God will happen as a consequence. It happens as a consequence. It is the fragrance of love and nothing else. In fact there is no God but only godliness. There is no person like God anywhere. Drop all childish attitudes, don't go on searching for a father. Divineness is, God is not. When I say divineness is, I mean whatsoever is, is full of God. The green of the trees, and the red and the golden -- all is divine. This crow crying, and a bird on the wing. and a child giggling, and a dog barking -- all is divine. Nothing else exists."
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- 🔘 This,This, A Thousand Times This - The Very Essence of Zen :
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- Through his commentaries on anecdotes about Zen masters Osho reiterates that Zen is not for the mass-mind but only for the individual who is unconcerned with the dictates of the status quo. Further, Zen is for those intelligent enough to understand the limitations of the intellect and ready to recognize the significance of intuition in the world of mysticism. Throughout, Osho keeps bringing the reader back to the moment, to "This" as the only reality.
- 🔘 The Transmission of The Lamp :
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- In this third book which covers much of the esoteric side of the spiritual search, Osho responds to questions from the small group of sannyasins with him on tour. He explains 'witnessing' or 'watching' as a 24-hour technique that can be done anytime, anywhere; and talks on astral projection, past lives, and the origins of depression.
- 🔘 The True Sage :
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- Ten discourses on Hasidism, in which Osho responds to stories from Tales of the Hasidim (Die Erzählungen der Chassidim) by Martin Buber, and to questions submitted by disciples and seekers. This book is a mixture of light-hearted storytelling and the penetrating understanding of a true sage. Like the Hassids, Osho's own emphasis is on playfulness and celebration: "Judaism has produced one of the most essential lines of mystics, the Hassids. It is one of the most beautiful ways to find oneself and to find the reality of existence."
- 🔘 Turning In :
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- In these eight talks, each of which is based on the sayings of a different enlightened Zen master, Osho gives detailed explanations of the Zen method of meditation, "turning in." He outlines the development of man's mind, and emphasizes that meditation is essential not only for the growth of the individual, but ultimately for the survival of the planet.
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