Ashtavakra Geeta - Osho May 2026

OSHO didn’t just explain the Ashtavakra Gita; he ignited it. He referred to it as one of the most profound and dangerous scriptures ever written—dangerous because it destroys the ego at its very root, leaving no ladder to climb, no god to pray to, and no future to hope for. Before diving into OSHO’s lens, let’s set the stage. The Ashtavakra Gita is a dialogue between a sage physically twisted in eight places (Ashta = eight, Vakra = crooked) and a king who has everything—wealth, power, pleasure—yet feels empty.

If that question stirs something deep within you, perhaps it’s time to pick up OSHO’s "Ashtavakra Mahageeta" (or listen to the discourses online). Let the crooked sage and the rebellious master remind you of who you have always been. Ashtavakra geeta - OSHO

OSHO translates this into everyday psychology. Your anxiety, your guilt, your search for meaning—all of it stems from the belief that you are a limited doer. Ashtavakra cuts through this by declaring that the world you see is not even real enough to be renounced. If it is a dream, who is renouncing what? OSHO didn’t just explain the Ashtavakra Gita; he

In the vast ocean of spiritual literature, certain texts stand out not just for their wisdom, but for their radical, uncompromising nature. The Ashtavakra Gita (or Ashtavakra Samhita ) is one such gem. And when a master like OSHO picks up this ancient dialogue between the sage Ashtavakra and King Janaka, the result is not a commentary—it is a wildfire. The Ashtavakra Gita is a dialogue between a