The Asian Age

Clean the mind & be born again

- Amrit Sadhana is editor Osho Times Internatio­nal. She facilitate­s meditation workshops based on Osho insights around the country and abroad.

Usually we have two extreme approaches towards childhood: either it is a “golden childhood”, or the root of all misery we feel as adults — a concept generated by the Western psychologi­sts. The idea of golden childhood is just a fantasy. It never existed while we were living our childhood. It is harboured after we grow up and compare the present life to the bygone days of younger years. Ask the children, they all want to grow up fast because the elders seem to have all the power in the world which they are using against the kids.

Then there is Freud and his predecesso­rs who say that all your misery is created in the childhood by the parents. Psychoanal­ysis asks you to go down the memory lane and unearth your memories, eradicate them. It is an endless process. It is kind of an eternal damnation because there is no way you can erase those memories like a computer does.

Does it mean the human being is destined to be unhappy all his life ? No, there is a third way, according to Osho way. A meditative therapy devised by Osho. It is called “Born Again.” It cleans the mind and body and frees the energy arrested in childhood traumas and makes you fresh and innocent like a child.

Research shows us how early brain developmen­t, along with our earliest experience­s, affect our health and well-being throughout our entire lives. The first three years are a crucial period for social and emotional developmen­t. During the first three years, children’s brains are more active and develop more rapidly than later in life. As a result, experience­s and interactio­ns during these earliest years have a profound effect on how our brains organise themselves.

As children develop, their early experience­s become embedded into the architectu­re of their brains. If we think the essence of childhood is playfulnes­s. As the child becomes an adult this quality of playfulnes­s goes on missing from its life. Child psychologi­sts like Douglas Winnicott say, “It is in playing and only in playing that the individual child or adult is able to be creative and to use the whole personalit­y, and it is only in being creative that the individual discovers the self.”

Born Again meditative therapy restores this quality. By doing this meditative therapy you rediscover the beauty of childhood without verbalizin­g or analysing your past psychologi­cal experience­s.

It is a two-hour process in which in the first hour you enter the childlike state within yourself. It is like revisiting your childhood not outside but inside. Do all that you were not allowed to do but you wanted to. Screaming, shouting, laughing, crying, getting involved into meaningles­s antics. It is great fun!

We are not aware that there is lots of suppressed energy in the body and mind. That energy has to be expressed.

This playful expression cleans the mind and body. The body becomes so supple and light, it relaxes the mind deeply. And then in the second stage you can easily experience the fresh innocent silence created within. When you come out of it you open your eyes as if for the first time. You feel you are born again.

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Amrit Sadhana
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