Why do sannyasins change their names and wear a mala?
Synthesized from Source
definition
"Symbols are secondary; the real work is awakening, not dressing up in identities."
According to Osho, sannyasins' outer identifiers—orange robes, malas, even new names—have no ultimate rationale; they are simply his playful eccentricity: he loves the color orange and he loves himself, hence the mala. If you need a theory, ask the disciples. Symbols are secondary; the real work is awakening, not dressing up or debating who is 'more' enlightened.
They wear orange and a mala (and may take new names) mostly because Osho likes it; the outside look isn’t what makes you awaken.
Why this matters practically
- Keep attention on inner transformation, not dress codes or labels.
- Drop arguments about who’s “more enlightened”; realize it yourself.
- Loosen the need to rationalize rituals, avoiding new dogmas.
- Drop arguments about who’s “more enlightened”; realize it yourself.
- Loosen the need to rationalize rituals, avoiding new dogmas.
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