“There was no one there. The chair was empty. And yet, in that emptiness, something opened in me.”
– Vishrant
What does it mean to truly love a Master?
Not admiration. Not reverence.
But the kind of love that changes your entire life direction.
The kind that teaches you how to die.
It’s called devotion.
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The Emptiness That Lights the Way
When Vishrant speaks of Osho, he doesn’t speak as a fan, a follower, or even a disciple.
He speaks as someone who saw the flame-
And let it burn everything false away.
It wasn’t about the personality.
It wasn’t about charisma or teachings.
It was the absence.
“There was no one there. Just total absence. The chair was truly empty.”
That emptiness didn’t create confusion.
It created stillness.
And in that stillness, devotion arose and Vishrant’s path began to bend toward death-not physical death, but the annihilation of the one who seeks.
Osho became the doorway.
A living transmission of beingness.
And from that encounter, Vishrant learned how to die for truth.
No One Left to Wake Up
Enlightenment isn’t a personal gain.
There’s no enlightened “you” waiting at the finish line.
There’s no finish line.
There’s only finding yourself as truth.
“Coming towards enlightenment there’s no wanting anymore. There’s no desires at all. Just nothing.”
Gratitude Beyond Words
How do you thank someone who helped set you free?
You can’t.
Words collapse under the weight of it.
Because the gratitude isn’t conceptual – it’s alive.
It breathes in every act of surrender.
It lives in the stillness that remains after the mind lets go.
“Osho was a light so others could see. But to become that light, he sacrificed himself.”
This is the love Vishrant speaks of:
A generous willingness.
The Path of Relaxation
When Osho gave him the name Vishrant – meaning rest – it wasn’t a compliment.
It was meant as a practice.
Because Vishrant was a high-flying businessman, cranking on 12 cylinders.
Driven. Sharp. Always moving.
But awakening demands relaxation.
A slow down.
“It is a relaxed mind that supports insight.
So Vishrant made it his practice:
To become restful.
To embody his name.
Sannyas: A Second Birth
Taking sannyas, where a student commits to his teacher, wasn’t a symbolic gesture for Vishrant.
It was a rebirth. A wiping of the slate.
New name. New life. New start.
And it wasn’t done with calculation – it came from inner knowing.
“There was no debate in my mind. I just knew. It was like something inside knew what to do.”
There was no logic to it.
No future to be gained.
Only a pull toward something real – something alive.
And that inner knowing shaped Vishrant’s whole life.
The Real Gift You Give Others
People often ask Vishrant how to love themselves.
How to be less anxious. How to relax.
His answer is always the same:
Openness allows the perception of love.
Nothing else really.
If you are open, kindness is one of the qualities the mind comes up with, along with generosity and compassion.
When you are kind, your whole presence changes.
And your presence becomes your gift.
You don’t need to fix anyone.
You don’t need to know anything.
Just be kind.
That’s the field others feel.
Slow Down to Feel Love
Love doesn’t reveal itself in speed.
You can’t rush to the heart.
You have to slow down.
“People who run fast miss everything.”
To feel another, you must pause and open up.
To witness the mind, you must become still.
To discover love you must be open.