Why is the practice of formlessness so difficult?
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"The difficulty of formlessness lies not in the infinite itself, but in our clinging mind that panics when faced with the absence of limits and relationships. To embrace the formless, one must first learn to let go of the familiar confines of the mind."
According to Osho, formlessness is hard because the mind can only handle limits, forms, and relationships; it panics before the infinite and stalls when there is no 'other' to relate to. The sadhana demands dropping the mind here and now. The difficulty is not in the formless but in our clinging mind; if you can't drop it, begin with form.
It’s difficult because our mind needs shapes and someone to relate to, and the formless has neither—only a quiet, dropped mind can know it.
Why this matters practically
- Choose a fitting practice: if dropping mind is hard, start with form-based devotion or meditation.
- Train mind-dropping: practice silence, witnessing, and no-object attention.
- Avoid self-deception: don’t imagine the formless—recognize mind’s limits and progress gradually.
- Train mind-dropping: practice silence, witnessing, and no-object attention.
- Avoid self-deception: don’t imagine the formless—recognize mind’s limits and progress gradually.
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