According to Osho, sannyas benefits you by ending postponement and dream-living, anchoring you in the only real time—this moment. It invites an intense, sensitive, total way of living, squeezing the full juice from life now. Because life is unpredictable, sannyas frees you from regret and fear, bringing immediacy, authenticity, and celebrative aliveness to everyday existence.
Choosing sannyas means stop waiting and fully enjoy and feel life right now, because tomorrow might not come.
From the Discourses
Passages where Osho speaks to this question — each links to the complete discourse.
Just Around The Corner · Discourse 20
1979-05-20 · Chuang Tzu Auditorium · English
Sannyas is a quantum leap, a jump into the unknown, a great courage to become discontinuous with your own past. It is a rebirth. It is a change so great... as if the old dies, and dies utterly and totally and the new comes into being from nowhere, from nothingness, out of nothing. If the new comes from the old it remains the old. If the new is continuous with the old then it is only a modification of the old -- maybe a little bit colored and decorated and changed, with a new dress, with a new mask, but it is not a revolution, it is not a conversion. And sannyas to be true has to be a revolution so total that the old identity is simply dropped -- just as the snake slips out of the old skin and never looks back.Read the full discourse →
Come Come Yet Again Come · Discourse 4
1980-10-30 · Buddha Hall · English
Beloved Osho, what is sannyas?
Sannyas is hope -- hope against all hope. People have lost all hope; they are living hopelessly. They are living simply because they are cowards and cannot commit suicide. The existentialist philosophers are right when they say that the most important philosophical problem is suicide: to live or not to live, to be or not to be. If this is life that ordinary people are living, then it does not seem to be worth living at all. What is the point of getting up every morning and going through the same empty gestures you have gone through thousands of times? The same breakfast, the same nagging wife, the same ugly husband; the same suspicions, the same possessiveness, the same jealousy, the same anger, the same ambition; rushing to the office, the same boss -- everything is the same, a constant repetition. And again coming back home and sitting in front…Read the full discourse →
The Heart Sutra · Discourse 8
1977-10-18 · Buddha Hall · English
Osho, why should I take sannyas?
Because tomorrow you may not be. The next moment you may not be. And sannyas is nothing but a vision of living this moment utterly, totally, absolutely. Sannyas simply means that you will not postpone life anymore. Sannyas simply means that you will not live in dreams anymore, that you will take hold of this moment and squeeze the whole juice out of it right now. That's what sannyas is: it is a way of intense living, of sensitive living. And remember, life is very accidental. One never knows. Listen to this story. A salesman came home unexpectedly one day, and the first words he said when he came in the door were, "Where is he? I know he is here! I can feel it in my bones!" His wife, who was cleaning the dishes at the time said, "Who are you looking for?" Salesman: "Don't give me that. You…Read the full discourse →
The Rainbow Bridge · Discourse 22
1979-07-23 · Chuang Tzu Auditorium · English
Anand Nishanto. Anand means bliss; nishanto means the end of the night. Sannyas is the end of the night and the beginning of a new dawn. To live in the ego is to live in darkness. Sannyas means surrendering your ego, saying "I am no more," becoming a nobody, dropping all nonsense about being somebody. Sannyas is a declaration that, "I am nothing, I am anonymous..." Just as rivers are, mountains are, stars are, animals are, birds are, with no name, with no fame. To be a sannyasin means again becoming part of this infinite nature. Once you drop the ego, you become part of the whole. The ego keeps you separate, it keeps a boundary between you and the whole, a wall.Read the full discourse →
Krishna The Man And His Philosophy · Discourse 22
1970-09-28 · English
September 28, 1970 was a memorable day. At Manali in the Himalayas, Osho initiated His first group of sannyasins. This event was followed by this special evening discourse, on the significance of Neo Sannyas. To me, sannyas does not mean renunciation; it means a journey to joy bliss. To me, sannyas is not any kind of negation; it is a positive attainment. But up to now, the world over, sannyas has been seen in a very negative sense, in the sense of giving up, of renouncing. I, for one, see sannyas as something positive and affirmative, something to be achieved, to be treasured. It is true that when someone carrying base stones as his treasure comes upon a set of precious stones, he immediately drops the baser ones from his hands. He drops the baser stones only to make room for the newfound precious stones. It is not renunciation.Read the full discourse →