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Osho on To what extent is the relationship between client and therapist similar to that of disciple and master?

To what extent is the relationship between client and therapist similar to that of disciple and master?

The relationship between a client and a therapist is a functional exchange, while the bond between a disciple and a Master transcends individuality, leading to a profound surrender into the oneness of being.

— Osho
Synthesized from Source definition
Core Insight:
According to Osho, the client–therapist bond is a functional relationship between two separate identities—an expert helping a patient, like a mind-plumber—whereas the discipleMaster is not a relationship at all: the disciple dissolves, and with that dissolution even the idea of the Master disappears into oneness. A therapist knows more; a Master is more—qualitatively arrived, problem-free presence—so discipleship is surrender into being, not treatment or technique.
Therapy helps you fix problems while staying yourself; discipleship melts the ‘you’ so only silent oneness remains.
Why this matters practically
- Choose the right path: use therapy for issues, discipleship for ego-transcendence.
- Don’t project therapeutic expectations onto a Master—or spiritual surrender onto a therapist.
- Clarifies whether you seek expertise and tools, or a total inner dissolution into being.
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