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What is the guru-disciple relationship?

Synthesized from Source definition

"The guru-disciple relationship is a wordless communion, where the enlightened presence of the guru transmits truth beyond concepts, and the disciple's trust becomes the bridge to firsthand realization."

According to Osho, the guru–disciple relationship is not teacher–student but a wordless communion with an enlightened presence. A guru does not claim guruship; egoless, he lives truth, and his very being transmits it. The disciple chooses receptivity and trust, like a lover’s reverence for one higher. Through intimate contact—sitting, walking, silence—firsthand realization is shared beyond concepts, where reason fails and only trust can guide.
A real guru is a silent, humble light you learn from by being close and trusting, not by lessons or arguments.
Why this matters practically
- Encourages learning by presence and example, not just ideas.
- Cultivates trust, openness, and humility when facing the unknown.
- Helps discern true guidance (egoless) from mere claims or information.
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