“You are not yet born, you are only an opportunity. You are not yet a fulfillment -- and only two fulfilled persons can relate. To relate is one of the greatest things of life: to relate means to love, to relate means to share. But before you can share, you must have. And before you can love you must be full of love, overflowing with love.” - Osho
Highlights:
Finding the delicate balance between independence and relatingWhy people are afraid of intimacyLove as a bridge between sex and prayer Why so many love affairs bring so much sufferingSeeing into the source of jealousy, and watching it disappearSimple suggestions to help you make all your relationships richer and more fulfilling
Osho represents what could be called THE NEW CONSCIOUSNESS – the capability to understand that the whole of existence is interconnected and interdependent. The smallest grass leaf is as important as the brightest star - everything is connected and makes its unique contribution to the whole. This new awareness allows us to see and to experience life in a totally different way, opening us to a greater understanding of the mysteries of life.
OSHO: for more than 35 years, he delivered lectures all around the world. The international press calls him “A 21st Century Prophet” and “an oracle of modern times.” He didn’t write, he
spoke, and from recordings of his public discourses, hundreds of books have been published. His books and audio lectures are international bestsellers.
Osho himself says that he is neither a prophet nor a philosopher; he is simply sharing his own experience. The Sunday Times described him as “one of the 1000 makers of the 20th century” and American author Tom Robbins described him as “the most dangerous man since Jesus Christ” -- both comments reflecting the profound influence of his revolutionary approach to the science of inner transformation.
Spoken with authority, clarity, sharpness and humour, these original recordings address both timeless and timely concerns in an absolutely contemporary way, reminding the listener of the importance of subjects which, being common to all of human beings, tend to escape our notice in the clamour and overload of daily life.