The Long and the Short and the All
- "You ask what my message is? It is a brief one indeed: those who are awake are alive; those who are asleep miss everything.
- No man is given manhood ready-made. He has to build it by himself. This is both a blessing and a bane. It is a blessing because he is free to create himself; it is a bane because there is always the possibility he will die without ever having become a man." (Osho, Ch. 1.)
- translated from
- Hindi :
- Prem Ke Pankh (प्रेम के पंख) = "Wings of Love"
- Amrit Kan (अमृत कण) = "Random Thoughts" (See Wings of Love and Random Thoughts.)
- Main Kaun Hun? (मैं कौन हूं?) = Who Am I?
- Agyat Ki Or (अज्ञात की ओर) = Towards the Unknown (now chapter 2 and 3).
- (Hindi antecedent not known) = The Mysteries of Life and Death (now chapter 5).
- notes
- Details of when and where these discourses are from originally are scanty. Parts of Who Am I? are from Mar 1967 and Kullu Manali in Aug 1969 has been mentioned as a possibility.
- time period of Osho's original talks/writings
- (unknown)
- number of discourses/chapters
- 6?
editions
The Long and the Short and the All
| |
The Long and the Short and the All
| |
The Long and the Short and the All
| |
The Long and the Short and the AllExcerpts from early discourses and letters
|