Why does the longing not lessen when God stands directly before the devotee?
Synthesized from Source
outcome
"The presence of the Beloved ignites an unbearable thirst, for it is not proximity that satisfies, but the union that dissolves the illusion of separation."
According to Osho, longing intensifies in God’s very presence because nearness exposes the remaining separation. A first taste awakens an unbearable thirst; the suppressed yearning blazes when the Beloved is seen. Mere proximity cannot quench it—only union does. Until you “drink” God and the devotee disappears, the inch between you remains infinite, refining you through tears into readiness for grace.
Like seeing water makes you suddenly feel how thirsty you are, seeing God makes your hidden thirst explode—until you drink and become one, the ache won’t stop.
Why this matters practically
- Reframes restlessness and tears as signs of progress, not failure.
- Encourages moving from external seeking to inner union through love, surrender, and meditation.
- Reminds you that ego-dissolution, not proximity, ends suffering.
- Encourages moving from external seeking to inner union through love, surrender, and meditation.
- Reminds you that ego-dissolution, not proximity, ends suffering.
AI Confidence Score: 97%
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