Ask Osho!

What happens when I confess my past offenses?

Synthesized from Source outcome

"Confessing your past offenses is not a burden but a bridge to healing; in the light of truth, even your mistakes become steps toward freedom and inner peace."

According to Osho, when you confess a past offense you honor a present impulse toward truth, and that very acceptance drains the wound of guilt, lightens the burden, and lets the past drop. Suppression breeds fear, anxiety, and secrecy; expression brings healing, innocence, and freedom. In sincere admission, even your mistake becomes a step toward the temple—an obstacle transformed into growth, openness, and inner peace.
Saying honestly what you did wrong lets the hurt come out so you feel clean, calm, and free.
Why this matters practically
- Releases guilt and anxiety so you can move on.
- Turns mistakes into learning and inner growth.
- Builds an open life with nothing to hide, bringing freedom.
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