Ask Osho!

What is the significance of the moon's roundness and sharpness in Zen philosophy?

Synthesized from Source definition

"The moon’s roundness and sharpness remind us that wholeness exists even in partial appearances; your Buddha-nature is complete and independent, realized through the silent witnessing of life’s reflections."

According to Osho, the moon’s roundness and its sharp crescent are one reality: wholeness remains even when only a part appears. Manifest and unmanifest alternate with conditions, but nothing is lost. This symbolizes your own Buddha-nature: ever complete, independent of reflections, realized through silent witnessing and non-striving, like the moon and pond that neither intend nor resist, yet perfectly reflect.
Even when the moon looks like a slice, the whole moon is still there—just like your true self is always whole; be quiet and watch, and you'll sense it.
Why this matters practically
- Trust your inner wholeness during life’s “crescent” phases.
- Look beyond appearances and others’ reflections to what is constant.
- Practice desireless, silent awareness instead of forcing outcomes.
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