Ask Osho!

What does it mean to be wrong?

Synthesized from Source definition

"Being "wrong" is merely a mind-made label; in the living presence of now, there is only seeing, free from the chains of judgment."

According to Osho, being "wrong" is a mind-made label; in living presence there is only seeing, not right or wrong. He suggests responding freshly—"just this time"—without clinging to positions, so wrongness is only when ego insists on fixed answers. When you meet the moment directly, judgments drop and learning, humility, and truth unfold.
Being wrong just means your mind grabbed a fixed idea; stay present and you can see anew.
Why this matters practically
- Helps you drop defensiveness and learn faster.
- Reduces conflict by valuing presence over being right.
- Cultivates humility and openness in conversations.
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