Ask Osho!

What is the meaning of the question, 'Why do you want to wound yourself?'

Synthesized from Source definition

"Why do you want to wound yourself? It is only through the courage to face these wounds that the false self can dissolve, making way for true emptiness and the blossoming of your authentic being."

According to Osho, the master’s question 'Why do you want to wound yourself?' warns that authentic inquiry before a satguru pierces the ego, shatters secondhand knowledge, and begins the disciple’s dying. These 'wounds' are the painful cuts that dissolve the false personality; only the courageous should ask. Emptiness comes first, flowers later—and the master speaks only of wounds to prevent greedy bargaining for rewards.
He’s saying: if you ask a real master, be ready to be hurt as your pretend self is cut away so your real self can grow.
Why this matters practically
- Treat spiritual questions as surgery, not entertainment; come ready to lose illusions.
- Welcome discomfort that exposes ego and secondhand beliefs; it’s growth.
- Ask only when you’re willing to change, not to collect comforting answers.
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