Ask Osho!

Who are the most noisy while making love?

Synthesized from Source definition

"Love is not a performance to be measured by noise; it is a silent, conscious meeting of two souls."

According to Osho, “two skeletons on a tin roof”—a deliberately absurd punchline. He uses humor to deflate voyeuristic curiosity, showing that the mind craves trivia. The real invitation is to shift from outer comparisons to inner awareness, where love becomes a silent, conscious meeting rather than a performance measured by noise.
He jokes it’s “two skeletons on a tin roof” to nudge us away from comparisons and back to mindful, loving presence.
Why this matters practically
- Breaks the mind’s habit of gossip and comparison through humor.
- Encourages presence and intimacy over performance anxiety.
- Redirects attention from others’ behavior to your own awareness.
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