Gahre Pani Paith #2
Chapter Summary
The discourse invites a deliberate plunge into the 'deep waters' of being, where ordinary thinking dissolves and presence becomes a luminous, effortless river. Osho frames meditation not as an activity but as a radical surrender — to silence, to life, to the body — so the observer falls away and what remains is pure witnessing. He uses the image of drowning not as defeat but as initiation: only when the ego lets go can one experience the vastness beneath the mind's surface. The tone is at once intimate and confrontational, urging honest rebellion against conditioning and an experiment: live without stories and see what wakes. On meditation: practice is simply to remember your aliveness; technique must vanish into ordinary moments until meditation and life are indistinguishable. On silence: silence is not absence but a rich presence that contains answers, and cultivating inner pause makes the noisy mind reveal its smallness. On love: love is nonpossessive energy that arises when the self relaxes; true love is a celebration, not an arrangement to be negotiated by the ego. On the ego and death: the gift of 'dying' to the self is liberation — lose the little identity and you gain the boundless existence that has always been here.