IndianSanskriti
Bored to Death?

Bored to Death?

It’s a fine way to arrive at the brink of enlightenment, says OSHOBoredom and laughter are the most important qualities of human consciousness, but people are not ordinarily aware of either. When you get bored, before you become aware, you simply get occupied with some other activity which gives a new thrill, sensation. You go to a movie, you watch TV; you visit a friend, you start talking to somebody, may be the neighbour. You don’t have anything to say, he has nothing to say — you have talked about these things millions of times! Again you talk about the climate, the weather, about how your children are and how your wife is — and you are not a bit concerned. You are bored.

In a day, I use 5,000 words. You may be thinking, ‘I am talking too much’ — you are wrong. Once I have talked, I keep quiet — but I never go beyond the limit of 5,000 words. You can spread it out over the whole day, but in my case, I finish my quota in the morning. But I never go beyond the limit. I go on looking at the clock.

Looking For Thrills
People go on talking just to avoid their being, avoid their boredom. The husband is bored with the wife, the wife is bored with the husband, the mother is bored with the children, the children are bored with parents — everybody is simply bored! But we keep it below consciousness, otherwise you will wish to die. If boredom becomes clear to you, what are you going to do then? If life is just a rut, then what is the point of it all? You go on avoiding it.


In a religious community, it is brought to your notice; you are not allowed to avoid it. In a Zen monastery, they have a very boring routine — fixed for ever, for centuries. Never a thrill, never a sensation. In the morning, they get up, they do their zazen, they drink tea, perform walking meditation, eat breakfast. And everything is the same: the breakfast is the same, the tea is the same; again they do za-zen, again they go into the garden to work. And have you looked at the Zen garden?

Around their meditation hall, they don’t allow trees. They make a rock garden — to bore you completely. Because trees change: sometimes it is spring and there are flowers and greenery, and sometimes it is fall and the leaves are dropping. Trees are not monks. Trees go on changing round the year. In a Zen monastery, they make a rock garden, so nothing changes. You go on doing the same thing every day, and you look out and there are rocks and sand, and the same pattern. Why?

Boredom As Device
In Zen, boredom is used as a device: you are bored to death, and you are not allowed to escape. You are not to go outside, you are not to entertain yourself, you are not to do, you are not to talk, you are not to read novels and detective stories. No thrill. No possibility to escape anywhere.

And all the monks look alike: shaved. If you shave your head, remove your moustache, beard, you become almost a nonentity. Your face loses individuality. The monks look all alike, you cannot make out any difference. You see the shaven heads and you are bored.

The work is to bring boredom to such a point where no escape is possible and you have to go through the breakthrough. When it is unbearable, when it comes to a crescendo and you cannot bear it, then it explodes. From that extreme, you jump. Suddenly all boredom disappears, because the mind itself disappears.

Boredom is an indication of mind. That’s why animals are not bored. When boredom disappears, the mind, too disappears. That’s what in Zen they call ‘satori’.

Laughter can also be used in the same way. If you can go on laughing at the ridiculousness of things, one day you will see that there is no more laughter. That’s the point. When one day laughter disappears, the mind disappears too.

I use both together. First I bore you, then I help you to laugh. From one extreme to another, like a tightrope-walker: when he is falling towards the left, he leans towards the right; when he leans towards the right too much and feels now he will fall, he leans towards the left. And by and by a balance arises.

~Courtesy Osho International Foundation

You may also like

Search the website

Like us on Facebook

Get daily updates via Email

Enter your email address:

Recent Posts

Yogini Ekadashi 2026 — The Yaksha Who Missed the Morning Flowers, and the Ekadashi That Undid His Curse

On Friday, July 10, 2026, the rare Krishna Paksha Ekadashi of Nija Ashadha arrives. The Padma Purana tells the story of Hemamali — the Yaksha gardener of Bhagavan Kubera in Alaka, whose single morning of distraction with his wife Vishalakshi cost him his form, his wife, and his celestial city. Cursed to wander the earth of Bharata as a leper for a long time, he was at last shown the way back by Sage Markandeya — a single sincere keeping of Yogini Ekadashi.

Jamai Shashthi 2026 — The Story of Maa Shashthi, the Cat, and the Wife Who Was Forgiven

Jamai Shashthi 2026 — The Story of Maa Shashthi, the Cat, and the Wife Who Was Forgiven

On Saturday, June 20, 2026, Bengali households across Bharata will welcome their married daughters and sons-in-law home for the legendary jamai-aador feast and perform the Shashthi Vrata. But behind the warmth lies a story most Bengalis know by heart and most non-Bengalis have never heard — the wife who stole the hilsa, blamed the cat, lost six sons to Maa Shashthi’s wrath, and was finally forgiven. The Vrat Katha, the vidhi, the mantras, and the deeper teaching.

Vat Purnima 2026 — The Wife Who Argued Yama Into Returning Her Husband’s Life

On Monday, June 29, 2026, women across Maharashtra, Gujarat, and southern Bharata will tie red thread around banyan trees and hear the story of Savitri — the wife who walked behind Yamaraja Himself when He came for her husband, and out-argued the Lord of Dharma into returning Satyavan’s life. The Mahabharata’s Pativrata Mahatmya Parva, the vrat vidhi, and why the banyan witnessed everything.

Nija Jyeshtha 2026 — The Real Jyeshtha Begins, and the Calendar Resumes

Nija Jyeshtha 2026 — The Real Jyeshtha Begins, and the Calendar Resumes

With Adhik Maas now closed on the Somvati Amavasya of June 15, the long-postponed festivals of Jyeshtha return — Vat Purnima (June 29, the Savitri-Yamaraja katha), Jamai Shashthi (June 20, the Bengali festival of Maa Shashthi), Sankashti Chaturthi (June 28), Yogini Ekadashi (July 10), and Devshayani Ekadashi (July 16, opening the four-month Chaturmas of Bhagavan Vishnu’s yoga-nidra). A guide to what the next four weeks hold and what the household that kept Purushottam Maas now carries forward.

The Closing of Purushottam Maas 2026 — Adhik Amavasya and the Sealing of the Month-Long Vrat

On Monday, June 15, 2026 — a rare Somvati Amavasya — the intercalary month that bears Bhagavan Vishnu’s own name comes to its close. The Acharyas teach that a vrat is not measured by its duration but by its closing. Here are the Padma Purana’s instructions for sealing the month-long Purushottam Maas vrat: the morning snan, the closing puja with the Vishnu Sahasranama, the day of dana, the Somvati Amavasya gift, and the final sarva-arpana — the offering of all merit at the feet of the Lord.

css.php