What is the relationship between human actions and nature?
Synthesized from Source
definition
"To fight against nature is to create suffering; to flow with it is to discover bliss."
According to Osho, all human actions—struggling, swimming, thinking, winning, losing—are nature itself; nothing stands outside it. The idea of “fighting nature” is a mental illusion that breeds suffering, while nature remains impartial and unmoved. Within this single flow you can choose your stance: struggle and suffer, float and be happy, or dissolve like a drop in the ocean and know bliss.
You’re part of nature like a drop in the ocean; if you imagine a fight you only hurt yourself, but if you relax and go with the flow you’ll be happier—and if you fully let go, you’ll find bliss.
Why this matters practically
- Reduces stress by dropping the futile inner fight with life.
- Encourages choosing harmony over ambition: float rather than force.
- Points to surrender as a direct path to deeper joy and resilience.
- Encourages choosing harmony over ambition: float rather than force.
- Points to surrender as a direct path to deeper joy and resilience.
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