Ask Osho!

What happens when one takes sannyas?

Synthesized from Source outcome

"Taking sannyas is to embrace the open sky of life, where the urge for safety dissolves and love flourishes in the freedom of trust."

According to Osho, taking sannyas means choosing utter insecurity—the open sky of life—over the dead safety of control. By consenting to life’s unpredictability, the urge for safety dissolves; fear drops, love stays alive, and a paradoxical security arises from trust. You stop caging birds and flowers—people and experiences—and begin living in freedom, freshness, and presence.
Sannyas is saying yes to life even when it’s uncertain, so fear relaxes and you feel truly free.
Why this matters practically
- Accepting uncertainty reduces anxiety and builds real inner steadiness.
- Letting go of control keeps love and creativity alive.
- You live courageously in the present instead of following dead routines.
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