Will you wait for me?
Synthesized from Source
outcome
"The awakened one waits not in time, but as a compassionate presence, ever ready to support those who dare to walk the path of readiness."
According to Osho, the awakened one waits—not as a body in time, but as a compassionate presence in consciousness. Buddha’s ‘waiting at the gates’ points to an ongoing availability that helps whoever is ready. Your openness and courage invite that help; the master delays departure out of compassion, yet you must walk the path and cultivate readiness.
Yes—the master’s loving presence waits beyond time, but you still need to open your heart and move toward it.
Why this matters practically
- Builds trust: you’re not alone; guidance arises when you’re receptive.
- Centers you on inner readiness—meditation, openness, courage—rather than chasing outer signs.
- Cultivates compassion so your awakening serves others, not just personal escape.
- Centers you on inner readiness—meditation, openness, courage—rather than chasing outer signs.
- Cultivates compassion so your awakening serves others, not just personal escape.
AI Confidence Score: 90%
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