What happens when thoughts arise during meditation?
Synthesized from Source
outcome
"When thoughts arise during meditation, it is a sign that you are still 'doing'; drop all effort and let awareness rest, for in stillness, time dissolves and natural bliss emerges."
According to Osho, thoughts arise because you are still 'doing'—even mantra or name-repetition agitates chitta and manufactures time. Restlessness makes minutes feel long; when the mind is utterly still, time vanishes. Drop all doing for a while—no mantra, no image, nothing—let awareness rest. As chitta quiets (helped by gentle pranayama), thoughts subside and natural bliss appears.
If thoughts pop up, it’s because you’re keeping the mind busy—stop doing anything, breathe gently, and they’ll settle on their own.
Why this matters practically
- Use non-doing and soft breath as quick resets when the mind gets noisy.
- Let time-sense guide you: pressure means restlessness; timelessness means depth.
- Avoid overreliance on techniques that can stir more thinking.
- Let time-sense guide you: pressure means restlessness; timelessness means depth.
- Avoid overreliance on techniques that can stir more thinking.
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