What remains when abhipsa ends?
Synthesized from Source
definition
"When the ardent desire for the Divine dissolves, all duality vanishes, leaving only the pure, indivisible essence of existence—the source from which we all arise and to which we all return."
According to Osho, when even abhipsa—the single, ardent desire for the Divine—falls away, the seeker and all duality disappear. Like the Ganga dissolving into the ocean, only the Ocean remains: the Divine, the Truth that preceded ‘you’ and endures beyond you. From many to one to zero, what remains is the source itself—pure, indivisible being.
When even your last longing for God drops, you vanish like a river in the sea, and only God remains.
Why this matters practically
- Consolidate scattered desires into one-pointedness; then surrender even that.
- Reduces inner conflict and anxiety; brings wholeness and peace.
- Points to ego-transcendence, shifting life from craving to trust in the Source.
- Reduces inner conflict and anxiety; brings wholeness and peace.
- Points to ego-transcendence, shifting life from craving to trust in the Source.
AI Confidence Score: 96%
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