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Osho on Is there another way without death and insecurity?

Is there another way without death and insecurity?

You are not the body, the mind, or the heartbeats; you are pure awareness, and in realizing your deathlessness, you dissolve the root of all insecurity.

— Osho
According to Osho, there is no death—only the outsider’s misreading of a change of house. Your real nature is pure awareness, not body, mind, or heartbeats. Through meditation, you discover this immortal center, ending the root fear that breeds insecurity. Recognizing your deathlessness dissolves anxiety and dependence on possessions, revealing innate equality and unshakable security.

Meditate to see you’re the awareness that doesn’t die, and then the fear that makes you feel unsafe fades away.

In His Own Words

From the Discourses

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

Question: BELOVED OSHO, IS THERE ANOTHER WAY WITHOUT DEATH AND INSECURITY? There is no death in the first place. Death is an illusion. It is always somebody else who dies; you never die. It means death has always been seen from the outside, it is the outsider's view. Those who have seen their inner world are unanimous in saying that there is no death. Because you don't know what constitutes your consciousness; it is not constituted of breathing, it is not constituted of heartbeats, it is not constituted of blood circulation. So when the doctor says that a man is dead, it is an outsider's conclusion; all that he is saying is, "This man is no longer breathing, his pulse has stopped, his heart is not beating." Are these three things equivalent to death? They are not. Consciousness is not your body, nor your mind, nor your heart.
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Maha Geeta · Discourse 88
1977-02-07 · Pune · Hindi · English translation

Osho, there is a great fear of death. Is there any way to be free of it?

I have heard that on his campaigns Alexander reached a place where he learned there was a spring whose water, if drunk, makes one immortal. He went in search of it. When he reached the spring, he rejoiced; never had he seen water so crystal clear. He was about to cup it in his palms when a crow perched on a branch said, “Stop, Alexander! You will regret it. First hear me.” Alexander was astonished—one marvel: water that grants immortality; another marvel: a speaking crow. “What do you want to say?” The crow said, “I too drank this water. I am no ordinary crow; as you are Alexander among men, I am Alexander among crows. I spent my life searching and found this spring. I drank—and now I writhe. I have been alive for thousands of years; I cannot die. I throw myself from cliffs, dash my head on rocks,…
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Sapna Yeh Sansar · Discourse 20
1979-07-30 · Pune · Hindi · English translation

Osho, forget even talking about death—I am afraid of the very word. How can one get rid of death?

Kusum Rani! There is no getting rid of death. One will have to die! Death is the other side of the same coin as birth. Once you are born—once you have taken one side of the coin—how can you avoid the other? Death already happened in birth. It may take you seventy years to find out, that’s all; but the event has already occurred. The very day a child is born, cry then and there; death has arrived. Now, whether anything else happens in life or not, one thing is certain: there will be death. Life is wondrous! In it, nothing is certain except death. Everything else is uncertain—may or may not be; but death will surely be. However much you run and hide, no one can escape death, no one can outrun it. And the more you fear, the more you die. Death comes only once, but to the…
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Mahaveer Meri Drishti Mein · Discourse 19
1969-09-28 · Hindi · English translation

Osho, the sense of insecurity in the inner life is quite difficult, yet perhaps one can manage it. How can that sense of insecurity be applied in practical or outer life? In business, in a job, in the external life—how can we use the feeling of insecurity?

I understand. In truth the question is not about outside and inside; the question is about knowing this truth that we are insecure. You don’t have to create a feeling of insecurity; it is a fact, simply a fact, that we are insecure. What is secure—outside or inside, anywhere? Are relationships secure? They are not. Is it certain that what was yours yesterday will still be yours today? That what is yours today will be yours tomorrow morning? Nothing is certain. Is respect secure? Not in the least. Yesterday a crowd stood behind someone—today you can’t even tell whether that man is alive or dead. What is secure? Is wealth secure? Insecurity is not a feeling; insecurity is the awareness of the truth that life is insecure. As life is, it is insecure. No guarantee of birth, of youth, of the body—no guarantee of anything. Awareness of this truth—and to…
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Koplen Phir Phoot Aayeen · Discourse 3
1986-08-02 · Bombay · Hindi · English translation

Osho, how can I understand myself? Nothing makes sense, and I feel a great fear of death.

Death is the greatest untruth in this world. Only bodies change, houses change, clothes change. But your essence is exactly the same as it has always been. But you must come to know it. Apart from recognizing that, religion has no other meaning. It will not happen by going to the mosque, nor to the gurdwara, nor to the temple—because there too you will do the same mischief; after all, you are the same. Now, if you see a beautiful woman in the temple, how will you refrain from giving her a little nudge? And in so holy a place it seems most fitting to perform such a holy act! No—right here in this world, where all the commotion is going on, is the real opportunity, the touchstone, the ordeal by fire. Here itself, for an hour at any time... Nor is it necessary that the time be fixed, because…
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