Ask Osho!

What is the difference between being mean and being miserly?

Synthesized from Source definition

"Mean-spiritedness is the withholding of love, while miserliness is the same fear expressed through money; both stem from a poverty-consciousness that can only be transformed by embracing inner abundance."

According to Osho, 'mean' is the smallness of heart that withholds love, kindness, and sharing; 'miserly' is that same smallness expressed with money. The labels differ, but the root is fear and poverty-consciousness. Become aware, laugh at the ego’s clutch, and move from scarcity to celebration: generosity flows naturally when you feel inner abundance.
Being mean is a small heart; being miserly is that smallness with money—open your heart and you’ll share easily.
Why this matters practically
- Notice when fear makes you hold back and choose a small act of giving instead.
- Practice generosity (time, attention, money) to shift from scarcity to abundance.
- Use humor and awareness to loosen the ego’s grip.
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