What does tapas-yajna mean and why is it called the yajna of following one’s own dharma?
Synthesized from Source
definition
"Tapas-yajna is the sacred discipline of allowing your true nature to blossom, for only in living your own dharma can joy and gratitude flourish, inviting the divine grace to accept your unique offering."
According to Osho, tapas-yajna is the sacrificial discipline of letting your inborn seed flower fully and offering that unique fragrance at the feet of the divine. It’s called the yajna of svadharma because only your own nature can blossom; imitation breeds anxiety, melancholy, and godlessness. When you live your dharma, joy ripens, gratitude arises, and grace—the upward pull of the divine—accepts the offering.
Become fully who you truly are, like a flower becoming itself, and offer that to the divine—don’t try to be someone else.
Why this matters practically
- Stops comparison and wasted energy on imitation.
- Uses joy as a compass to align work, love, and creativity with your true nature.
- Invites gratitude and grace, easing melancholy and restlessness.
- Uses joy as a compass to align work, love, and creativity with your true nature.
- Invites gratitude and grace, easing melancholy and restlessness.
AI Confidence Score: 62%
Read Original Discourse →