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What does shreyarthi mean and is it the same as sadhak?

Synthesized from Source definition

"A shreyarthi seeks the ultimately good, embracing hardship for the sake of bliss, while a preyarthi chases fleeting pleasures that lead to suffering. In essence, a true sadhak is a shreyarthi, for it is the orientation of the heart that matters, not just"

According to Osho, shreyarthi means one who seeks shreyas—the ultimately good, true, and auspicious—accepting initial tapas and hardship while the senses rebel, leading finally to bliss; the opposite is preyarthi, who chases pleasant sensations and ends in suffering. Is it the same as sadhak? In spirit, yes: a genuine sadhak is a shreyarthi; the term highlights orientation, not mere practice.
A shreyarthi chooses what’s truly right even if it’s hard at first, unlike those who just chase nice feelings now—basically what a real sadhak does.
Why this matters practically
- Helps you choose long-term truth and growth over short-term pleasure.
- Normalizes early discomfort (tapas) as a sign you’re on a deeper path.
- Guides daily decisions toward what is lasting, not just novel or easy.
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