What is the difference in experience between Satori and Samadhi?
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outcome
"Satori is a fleeting glimpse that leaves the knower longing, while samadhi is the eternal dissolution of the knower into timeless presence, where desire and memory cease to exist."
According to Osho, satori is a bounded gap—a brief glimpse that begins and ends. The knower survives, remembers it, and therefore longs to repeat it. Samadhi also opens as a gap but becomes endless: the knower dissolves, so there is no memory, no desire, no past or future—only effortless, timeless presence. Satori changes you; samadhi ends you.
Satori is a short peek you can remember; samadhi is a never-ending state where ‘you’ vanish and only the present remains.
Why this matters practically
- Distinguishes temporary spiritual highs from abiding realization, avoiding confusion and disappointment.
- Encourages using glimpses as pointers while focusing on dissolving the ego rather than chasing experiences.
- Fosters present-moment living and desirelessness, easing anxiety about past and future.
- Encourages using glimpses as pointers while focusing on dissolving the ego rather than chasing experiences.
- Fosters present-moment living and desirelessness, easing anxiety about past and future.
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