About Heartbeat of the Absolute
In these talks Osho gives during a meditation camp, sutras from these ancient Sanskrit scriptures - the Ishavasya Upanishad - are transmuted into stunning insights that can open the reader’s eyes to his own inner reality. Osho speaks on issues that touch the heart and intellect of every individual: love and possessiveness, our investment in forgetting the phenomenon of death and the nature of the mind are amongst but a few. He also gives practical suggestions how to prepare for meditation and how to extract the most from the meditation techniques.
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Chapter Titles
Chapter 1: All Is a Miracle
Chapter 2: Neither Mine nor Yours
Chapter 3: The Shape of Water
Chapter 4: The True Desire
Chapter 5: A Milestone Marked Zero
Chapter 6: Truth Is Absurd
Chapter 7: Become a Mirror
Chapter 8: The Shadow of the Ego
Chapter 9: Beyond Science
Chapter 10: Ignorance Will Show You the Way
Chapter 11: I Too Am Listening
Chapter 12: I Am Not the Body
Chapter 13: Animal, Vegetable or God?
Chapter 14: The Seed and the Tree
Chapter 15: Let Us Die
Chapter 16: Only the Knowing Remains
Chapter 17: The Ultimate Jump
Chapter 18: At the Door of Samadhi
Chapter 19: Transformation Is the Test
Chapter 20: Existence Is One
Excerpt from Heartbeat of the Absolute
Chapter 20
"Many commentaries have been made on this Upanishad, but this is the first occasion on this earth when the commentary was accompanied by meditation. So a deep search of its manifest meaning and of its inner meaning was made simultaneously. The words of the Upanishad have been explained before, but this is the first occasion on which an active effort has been made to jump into its inner meaning - its soul. Whatever I have been telling you was with the purpose of making a diving board for you: the purpose was the jumping. This is why we entered into meditation at the end of each sutra, so that you might experience its significance by taking a jump into it.
So now I can tell you its inner meaning. You have not yet considered the meaning of these words enough; but you have done something else - you have reached silence, calm. Those who understand the words are able to know the meaning, but only those who know silence are able to know its inner meaning, its essence. If you have achieved even a little taste of silence, you will be able to understand the inner meaning into which I am about to enter.
The first thing I shall tell you about the inner meaning of this sutra is that it has declared that life is illogical. This is not said anywhere in so many words in this sutra, there is only a hint about it. Now I shall tell you what is unsaid, what is only hinted at."
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