Is it essential for a seeker to know the futility of doing?
Synthesized from Source
definition
"The essence of spiritual growth lies in realizing that true liberation comes not from doing, but from the dissolution of the doer. When the urge to do fades, the ego collapses, and the Divine reveals itself effortlessly."
According to Osho, yes: the sole value of all spiritual methods is to exhaust the urge to do, so you see that nothing real happens through doing. When doing loses its allure, the doer collapses; ego empties, and the door to the Divine opens. Failure becomes the liberating device, dissolving ‘I’ and allowing effortless alignment with the whole.
You keep trying until you realize doing won’t deliver truth—then the need to push drops, ego softens, and life moves you.
Why this matters practically
- Eases ego-driven strain and disappointment.
- Prevents desperate acts by exposing the ego behind “I can do.”
- Cultivates surrender, peace, and openness to grace.
- Prevents desperate acts by exposing the ego behind “I can do.”
- Cultivates surrender, peace, and openness to grace.
AI Confidence Score: 95%
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