What is the difference between gazing at an open clear sky, gazing at an enlightened master's photo, and gazing at the darkness?
Synthesized from Source
definition
"What matters is not the object of your gaze, but the quality of your awareness; in stillness, the mind finds its true nature."
According to Osho, in tratak the object is incidental; the act of unwavering, alert gazing stills the mind’s habitual movement. An open sky, a master’s photo, or darkness are merely different anchors: sky/light can aid wakeful expansiveness, darkness invites inwardness but risks sleep, and a master’s image can add love—useful unless it triggers thinking. What matters is total, present awareness.
What you gaze at doesn’t matter—just look without blinking and stay fully awake; sky, a master’s face, or darkness only help in different ways.
Why this matters practically
- Gives a simple way to quiet mental chatter and enter meditation.
- Lets you pick an anchor that matches your temperament (light, darkness, or devotion).
- Trains alert stillness without drifting into dullness or sleep.
- Lets you pick an anchor that matches your temperament (light, darkness, or devotion).
- Trains alert stillness without drifting into dullness or sleep.
AI Confidence Score: 70%
Read Original Discourse →