Osho Es - Dhammo Sanantano.pdf _verified_
“Look,” said the weaver. “Do you see that leaf falling into the water?”
(The First Principle of Self-Revolution: Non-Enmity).
Downloading the PDF is an act of intention. Reading it is an act of exploration. Living it is the only true act of religion.
Es Dhammo Sanantano is a foundational spiritual phrase meaning "This is the Eternal Law." Derived from the ancient Pali language, Buddha used these words to describe the changeless truth of existence. Osho Es Dhammo Sanantano.pdf
"You cannot step into the same river twice, and you cannot have the same ego twice. It is a flux." Reading this section of the PDF often induces a "gestalt shift"—a sudden realization that you are not who you think you are.
Do not expect a systematic theology or a set of moral commandments. Instead, prepare for a journey into the nature of your own consciousness. Osho's interpretation of Buddha is unique; he strips away centuries of religious dogma and presents the Buddha's message as a pure science of inner transformation. As one online dictionary notes, the phrase aes dhammo sanantano is often translated as "this is the eternal law," a phrase frequently spoken by Shakyamuni Buddha. Osho, in his own way, brings this ancient law into a contemporary context, making it relevant and applicable to modern life.
Having the text saved digitally allows spiritual practitioners to read Osho's insights on smartphones, tablets, or e-readers while traveling or during meditation retreats. “Look,” said the weaver
“Watch,” said the weaver. He took a single golden thread and began weaving it through the warp. “This thread was once flax in a field. Before that, it was earth and rain. Before that, sunlight and starlight. Before that — who knows? It has changed form a thousand times. But tell me: has the thread ever truly disappeared? Has the law by which it changes — birth, growth, decay, death, rebirth into something new — has that law ever been born or died?”
The term Sanantano itself means "beginningless – forever it has been". Osho uses this concept to illustrate that truth is not a recent discovery but an ancient, timeless reality. He illustrates this with the story that the sage Lao Tzu was said to be born old, symbolizing that truth is eternally old and always present.
| | How to Do It | Suggested Duration/Frequency | |--------------|------------------|----------------------------------| | Morning Mindful Breath | Sit upright, inhale for 4 sec, hold 2 sec, exhale for 6 sec. Focus on the sensation of air. | 5 min, daily | | Dynamic “Osho” Meditation | Follow a guided 15‑minute video of Kundalini (shaking, dancing, stillness). | 15 min, 3×/week | | Intuitive Meal | Before eating, pause, ask “What does my body truly need?” Eat slowly, chewing each bite 30‑40 times. | Every meal | | Walking Barefoot | On grass or clean natural ground, walk slowly, feeling each foot‑step. | 10 min, daily | | Gratitude Circle (solo or with others) | List three things you are grateful for, feel the warmth in your chest. | 3 min, morning & night | | Nature Immersion | Spend at least 30 min outdoors, no devices, simply observe sounds, smells, colors. | 3‑4 times/week | Reading it is an act of exploration
: This translates to timeless, ancient, or eternal. Key Themes in Osho’s Discourses
Unlike traditional Buddhist texts, which are often somber, this Osho discourse is filled with jokes and laughter. Osho insists that seriousness is a disease. To realize the eternal law, one must be light, playful, and willing to laugh at one’s own stupidity.












