Ask Osho!

What is the significance of the verse from the Srimad Bhagavatam regarding the foolish and the wise?

Synthesized from Source definition

"True wisdom begins when you recognize your own foolishness; only then can you see the futility of outer gains and awaken to the inner light of liberation."

According to Osho, the Bhagavatam’s verse—‘the extremely foolish are happy’—means unconscious people feel a false happiness because they lack awareness of their own suffering. Animals and most humans live thus, bound by attachments. True wisdom begins by recognizing one’s own foolishness; awareness reveals life’s inherent dissatisfaction and the futility of outer gains, opening the path to inner light and liberation.
Fools feel fine because they’re asleep; waking up shows the hurt, and honest seeing begins real freedom.
Why this matters practically
- Promotes mindful awareness instead of complacent, automatic living.
- Prevents chasing outer success to fix inner emptiness.
- Invites using pain as a wake-up call toward transformation.
AI Confidence Score: 95% Read Original Discourse →