Ask Osho!

What is the difference?

Synthesized from Source definition

"True thoughtlessness is not the absence of thought, but a vibrant awareness where the mind is alive and the inner chatter has been consciously set aside."

According to Osho, the difference is between a passive, accidental pause of thought and an awakened, choiceless silence. Being 'without thoughts' is brain numbness—like a paralyzed man sitting—caused by fatigue, shock, grief or joy. True thoughtlessness is alert, vital awareness where the brain is fully functioning, yet the inner stream of thinking has been consciously dropped; silence arises from understanding, not from incapacity.
Sometimes your mind goes blank because it’s stunned or tired; real meditation is when you’re wide awake and simply stop feeding thoughts—like choosing quiet, not being knocked silent.
Why this matters practically
- Helps distinguish true meditation from temporary stupor or shock.
- Guides practice toward alert awareness rather than forced suppression.
- Prevents mistaking fatigue or emotional shutdown for spiritual insight.
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