What is the fear of losing oneself all about?
Synthesized from Source
definition
"To lose oneself is not to fall into madness, but to surrender to the divine flow of existence; in that surrender, you discover the freedom and aliveness that transcends the mind's control."
According to Osho, the fear of losing oneself is an inherited, ego-based terror of going out of control—mistaken as madness. In truth, surrender is a divine ‘breakthrough,’ like learning to float: stop struggling, enter the water, and trust. Begin in safe spaces, then jump totally. What disappears is the false boundary; what remains is freedom, sanity, and aliveness beyond the mind’s control.
Your mind fears losing control, but if you relax and fully let go, you won’t drown—you’ll float and feel free.
Why this matters practically
- Eases anxiety by shifting from control to trust in direct experience.
- Invites practicing in supportive spaces, then committing fully to letting go.
- Converts fear of “madness” into creativity, joy, and inner freedom.
- Invites practicing in supportive spaces, then committing fully to letting go.
- Converts fear of “madness” into creativity, joy, and inner freedom.
AI Confidence Score: 90%
Read Original Discourse →