Ask Osho!
Osho on Is enlightenment the only exit from our current situation?

Is enlightenment the only exit from our current situation?

Enlightenment is not an option; it is your destiny, and the moment to awaken is always now—drop the search and recognize your already-present buddha-nature.

— Osho
According to Osho, enlightenment is the only exit—inevitable, not optional. You can delay for lifetimes, but existence itself keeps nudging you to awaken. Since becoming a buddha is destiny, the wise stop postponing and realize it now—tathata, herenow. Drop the search, recognize your already-present buddha-nature, and let a true master mirror it. Why suffer longer when freedom is available this very moment?

Waking up inside is the only real way out, and since you’ll do it eventually, choose to do it now and stop hurting.

In His Own Words

From the Discourses

Passages where Osho speaks to this question — each links to the complete discourse.

Joshu The Lion S Roar · Discourse 4
1988-10-18 · Gautam the Buddha Auditorium · English

Maneesha has asked: beloved Osho, it seems you have closed off all escape routes for us. Am I right in feeling that enlightenment is less and less an option, but, rather, the only exit?

It is existence itself that brings you to a master. It is your own urge that impels you towards a master. There is no exit. Even if you go far away from me, it will not make any difference; I will haunt you wherever you go. Zareen had gone to her house, but I haunted her there. In the morning she was back. I inquired of Anando, "Just look to see whether Zareen is back on the gate or not." She said, "Why?" I said, "I have been haunting her the whole night! I hope that she is well enough and back at the gate where she is needed." Once you have become part of my caravan there is no way out, there is only a way in. Now Sardar Gurudayal Singh is repressing his desire. He wants to laugh even while I am speaking. But he has to suppress…
Read the full discourse →
Ecstasy The Forgotten Language · Discourse 10
1976-12-20 · Buddha Hall · English

Are you the only enlightened person in this ashram? If yes, is it impossible to enlighten or to be enlightened near an enlightened person?

SINCE I BECAME ENLIGHTENED I have never come across a person who is not enlightened. You see only that which you are. Before I became enlightened, the same was the case with me -- the whole world used to appear tremendously asleep, in darkness, in death, unenlightened, because you are reflected continuously everywhere. Every other person is just a mirror; you see yourself. So don't be worried about others; think about yourself. That should be your problem. Others are not your problems. Whether they are enlightened or not, how does it concern you? Why should you be worried about it? If somebody wants to remain unenlightened, it is absolutely his business to decide about it. If they want to play the game of being unenlightened, it's perfectly okay. If you have become fed up with the world, if you are fed up with your anguish and anxiety and you have…
Read the full discourse →
Zen The Path Of Paradox Vol 1 · Discourse 4
1977-06-14 · Buddha Hall · English

What is enlightenment?

Enlightenment is finding that there is nothing to find. Enlightenment is to come to know that there is nowhere to go. Enlightenment is the understanding that this is all, that this is perfect, that this is it. Enlightenment is not an achievement, it is an understanding that there is nothing to achieve, nowhere to go. You are already there -- you have never been away, you cannot be away from there. God has never been missed. Maybe you have forgotten, that's all. Maybe you have fallen asleep, that's all. Maybe you have got lost in many, many dreams, that's all -- but you are there. God is your very being. So the first thing is: don't think about enlightenment as a goal, it is not. It is not a goal, it is not something that you can desire. And if you desire it you will not get it. In desiring…
Read the full discourse →
From Unconciousness To Consciousness · Discourse 21
1984-11-19 · Lao Tzu Grove · English

Beloved Osho, what is enlightenment? Have the experience and the idea of enlightenment evolved with time?

So nirvana is just like darkness. The light is put off and your reality is all there, with all its beauty, benediction, blessing. But there is no word in English to translate nirvana. Jainas use the word moksha. Moksha means absolute freedom, ultimate freedom, freedom from all fetters. And the biggest fetter is the ego. Other fetters are just parts of the ego: greed, lust, ambition, anger. All that is thought to be sin in other religions, in Jainism is thought only to be a fetter. But the root, the main root of the whole tree of your slavery, is the ego. So cut the main root and all other roots will die of their own accord. Don't bother to cut small roots, branches, leaves, because they will come again. Cut the main root and the whole tree will die. And when all your fetters fall, what remains? The unfettered…
Read the full discourse →
The Fish In The Sea Is Not Thirsty · Discourse 3
1979-04-13 · Buddha Hall · English

Osho, I have heard that enlightenment, or the natural state of man, is something acausal -- it just happens. And all our endeavours to bring about awareness, to be aware, are actually taking us away from this state since they are all mind games, and these activities for self-awareness are just a "holy business". I cannot imagine what my life would be if I gave up the search since it has permeated my life as long as I can remember. If there is no way to integrate, nothing one can do, why all this activity? Why bother? Yet what else is there to do? Please comment.

It happens only to those who are not holding anything back, when you have put all that you have at stake, when nothing is left behind, when you are utterly empty, you have emptied yourself totally, and it is not happening, then the understanding arises, "My efforts are futile. My efforts are ego efforts -- the ego is futile. My efforts are my own mind games. The mind itself is the barrier." But this has to become your own experience, Samadhi. It is not going to help if you have heard it. You can hear great truths, but unless they arise in your own being they are not true. A heard truth is a lie: only an experienced truth is a truth. And only the experienced truth liberates. How will you experience it? You would like to have it without any efforts. You would like it to happen as it…
Read the full discourse →
Keep Exploring

Related Questions on Enlightenment