Ask Osho!

Is the desire for fictions and hopes a natural aspect of the mind?

Synthesized from Source definition

"The mind's desire for fictions and hopes is not a natural aspect of existence, but a product of cultural conditioning; true awareness flourishes only in the present moment, free from the illusions of the past and future."

According to Osho, the mind’s craving for fictions, hopes, and future promises is not natural but programmed, manufactured by culture, advertising, priests, and ideology. Nature knows only the present. When conditioning stops, the compulsion for imagined needs dissolves, and awareness enjoys the here-now. Only meditation reveals what is real beyond implanted beliefs.
Wanting make-believe things and distant hopes isn’t natural; it’s taught to you, and when you just be here now, the craving fades.
Why this matters practically
- Question conditioning (ads, clergy, ideology) and stop chasing false needs.
- Live in the present to reduce anxiety and dissatisfaction.
- Use meditation to deprogram and see what is truly needed.
AI Confidence Score: 97% Read Original Discourse →