Is man so complex and mysterious that no one can know him?
Synthesized from Source
definition
"Man is not complex but mysterious; to truly know him, one must embrace the childlike innocence of experience rather than the confines of intellect."
According to Osho, man is not complex but mysterious: complexity yields to intellect, mystery is the immeasurable and essentially unknowable. Man cannot be captured by concepts—he must be lived, tasted, recognized in childlike innocence, not analyzed. The more one 'knows,' the more one discovers the infinite remainder. Drop the scholar; become a blank page, and life’s rasa reveals itself as a celebrative, wordless recognition.
You can’t solve people (or yourself) like a puzzle; meet life with a quiet, childlike heart and simply feel it.
Why this matters practically
- Frees you from overthinking and control; invites presence and wonder.
- Shifts focus from labeling to direct experience—listening, sensing, loving.
- Encourages humility and innocence, deepening relationships and inner peace.
- Shifts focus from labeling to direct experience—listening, sensing, loving.
- Encourages humility and innocence, deepening relationships and inner peace.
AI Confidence Score: 97%
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