OSHO Audiobooks
Two hundred original Series of Talks are available, as Individual Talks, and as Selected or Excerpted Talks.
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The Very Foundation for One World
Talk #5 from the series The Transmission of the LampAlso Available As: eBook"The languages like Japanese or Chinese are certainly more protective of the essential quality of a word. But these languages are pictorial languages.
"The pictorial language is the language of the unconscious mind. That's why..." Learn More -
The Whole Challenge of Life
Your lake reflects the moon of godTalk #5 from the series The Divine Melody"Man is born awake and then he falls asleep. Man is born one and then he becomes many. Man is born individual and then he falls asleep and dreams of being a crowd. This is..." Learn More -
This Is Ego
Talk #5 from the series Returning to the Source"Ego is the basic problem, the most basic. And unless you solve it, nothing is solved. Unless ego disappears, the ultimate cannot penetrate you.
"The ego is like a closed door. The guest is standing..." Learn More -
Truth Needs No Proof
Talk #13 from the series The Secret"Truth needs no proof, it simply is. It cannot be proved or disproved. It is luminous, it is radiant. Its presence is immediately felt, but only by those who have the heart to feel. The..." Learn More -
When Buddhas Rebel
Talk #28 from the series The Rebellious SpiritAlso Available As: eBook"Nitin, your coming to me was from the very beginning not right. Those who come to me through their intellect only think they have come to me; they never arrive.
"You were attracted because you..." Learn More -
Who Says Humanity Needs Saving?
Talk #1 from the series From Darkness to LightAlso Available As: eBook"It is one of the trade secrets of all the religions to propose propaganda that humanity has to be saved.
"It is a very strange idea, but it is so old that nobody seems to..." Learn More -
Your Children Are Not Your Children
Talk #9 from the series Reflections on Khalil Gibran's The Prophet"It is almost impossible to find a book comparable to Kahlil Gibran's The Prophet, for the simple reason that it has a tremendous inner consistency: first he talks about love, then he talks about marriage..." Learn More
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