If someone has gone beyond chitta, would he still be moved by its spontaneous impulses?
Synthesized from Source
definition
"Going beyond chitta does not mean its absence; it becomes a harmonious part of a greater awareness, where spontaneity flows effortlessly and is witnessed with clarity."
According to Osho, going beyond chitta doesn’t abolish it; it integrates it. The realized one contains chitta within a larger awareness, so impulses still arise but are effortless, unconflicted, and witnessed. Spontaneity remains, yet it’s conscious, not mechanical—as in animals. What happens, happens from a collected, harmonious chitta, with a seeing presence behind every act.
Yes—natural urges still move him, but they arise in a calm, aware space without inner fights, like a grown-up guiding a playful child.
Why this matters practically
- Include instincts in awareness instead of suppressing them to reduce inner conflict.
- Practice witnessing so actions are spontaneous yet responsible.
- When parts align, choices unfold naturally, easing stress and strain.
- Practice witnessing so actions are spontaneous yet responsible.
- When parts align, choices unfold naturally, easing stress and strain.
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