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Osho on What is the concept of mastery in relation to the self?

What is the concept of mastery in relation to the self?

True mastery is the absence of the personal 'I'; it is becoming a hollow bamboo through which existence can sing freely.

— Osho
Synthesized from Source definition
Core Insight:
According to Osho, true mastery arises only when the personal 'I' is absent. The master is a guest—free, unpredictable, non-possessive—an empty flute through which existence sings. He does not do but allows, taking no credit, offering no obstruction. Mastery is egoless availability: becoming a hollow bamboo so that life moves purely through you—'I am not; only existence is.'
Being a master means your ego steps aside so life can play its music through you, like a breeze or a flute.
Why this matters practically
- Reduces ego-driven stress and conflict by cultivating humility and non-doing.
- Encourages openness and flexibility instead of rigid control.
- Fosters authentic presence so actions flow naturally, not from image or ambition.
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