The Long and the Short and the All: Difference between revisions
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:: (no Hindi ed.) = ''[[The Mysteries of Life and Death]]'' (now chapter 5). | :: (no Hindi ed.) = ''[[The Mysteries of Life and Death]]'' (now chapter 5). | ||
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notes = No details of when these discourses are from originally. Possibly Kulu Manali in August 1969.| | notes = No details of when these discourses are from originally. Possibly Kulu Manali in August 1969, though not all, since ''[[Who Am I]]'' was already translated and published in 1968.| | ||
period = From 1969 Not mentioned in the editions.|year=1969 | | period = From 1969 Not mentioned in the editions.|year=1969 | | ||
nofd = 6| | nofd = 6| |
Revision as of 16:36, 23 December 2013
- "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 = "Wings of Love"
- Amrit Kan = "Random Thoughts" (See Wings of Love and Random Thoughts.)
- Main Kaun Hoon? = Who Am I?
- Agyat Ki Aur = Towards the Unknown (now chapter 2 and 3).
- (no Hindi ed.) = The Mysteries of Life and Death (now chapter 5).
- notes
- No details of when these discourses are from originally. Possibly Kulu Manali in August 1969, though not all, since Who Am I was already translated and published in 1968.
- time period of Osho's original talks/writings
- From 1969 Not mentioned in the editions. : timeline
- number of discourses/chapters
- 6
editions
The Long and the Short and the All
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The Long and the Short and the All
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The Long and the Short and the AllExcerpts from early discourses and letters
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