OSHO Audiobooks
Two hundred original Series of Talks are available, as Individual Talks, and as Selected or Excerpted Talks.
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To Enter into Your Own Presence
Talk #25 from the series The Sword and the Lotus"It is unfortunate that man is not yet civilized enough to accept the truth. He lives in lies. His intelligence is not yet grown up to accept whatever is the case. He still goes on..." Learn More -
Totally Immersed in This Moment
Talk #16 from the series Philosophia UltimaOsho,
The other day you said that sex for reproduction is sinful. I have also read your words saying that the greatest creative act of a woman is in producing a child, and that there is a vast difference between a mother and a woman.
If this is so, then is there sin in participating in sex and in love in the hope of creating a child and experiencing the joy of creation and the renewing energy of the universe?
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Using Emotions as a Path to the Source
Talk #16 from the series The Book of SecretsOsho,
The last technique you discussed yesterday said that when a mood against someone or for someone arises, not to place it on the person in question but to remain centered. But when we experiment with this technique on our anger, hatred, etc. we feel that we are suppressing our emotion and it becomes a suppressed complex. So please clarify how to be free from these suppressed complexes while practicing the above technique. Learn More -
When You Are Ready...
Talk #8 from the series Yoga: The Mystery Beyond MindOsho,
How is it that an enlightened person like Krishnamurti cannot see that he is not helping people? If he is enlightened, shouldn't he be able to see all? And you say that you are able to help all types, but you also say that you are contradictory on purpose, so that some people will go away. If you are able to help all, why should some need to go away? 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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