Once upon a time in a quiet village nestled at the foot of the Himalayas, there lived a young man named Arav. He was not like the other villagers, who seemed content with their farms, families, and daily routines. Arav was restless. He often sat by the river, staring into the current, lost in questions that had no answers: What is the purpose of life? Why am I here? What lies beyond this body, beyond this mind?
One evening, after another sleepless night, Arav stood up, packed a small bag, and walked away from his village. He left without a word. He had heard tales of a mystic who lived deep in the forest, beyond the known paths—a man said to hold the secrets of existence.
Arav walked for days. He faced wild animals, hunger, and storms. Yet something pulled him forward, stronger than fear or fatigue. Finally, at the edge of a forest clearing, he saw a small hut. In front of it sat an old man with a long white beard, eyes closed, body still as stone.
Arav bowed low. “Master,” he said, “I have come in search of truth. Teach me. I am ready to renounce everything.”
The old man opened his eyes and smiled. “You have already renounced the most important thing,” he said. “The illusion that the answer lies elsewhere.”
The Lesson of the Leaf
The mystic did not speak much. He did not give Arav scriptures to study, nor did he ask him to follow rituals. Instead, he asked him to sit silently each day, watch the trees, listen to the river,breathe. At first, Arav was disappointed. Is this all? he thought. I came here seeking profound wisdom!
One after noon, as they sat beneath a mango tree, the mystic plucked a single leaf and handed it to Arav.
“Look at this,”he said.
Arav turned the leaf in his hands. It was green,delicate, with tiny veins and soft edges.
“Where did this leaf come from?” the mystic asked.
“From the tree,” Arav replied.
“And where is the tree?”
“Here.”
“And whereis‘here’?”
“In the forest,” Arav said,unsure where this was going.
The mystic smiled. “And the forest?”
“Inthe world.”
The mystic leaned closer and whispered, “And where are you?”
Arav blinked. He was suddenly aware of his breath, the sound of wind in the leaves, the weight of the silence between the two of them.
“I... Idon’t know,”he said.
“Exactly,”said the mystic. “And in not knowing... you begin to know.”
Dissolving into the Present
Weeks passed. Something began to change in Arav. He no longer felt the urgency
to‘become’anything. He
stopped searching for meaning and began to feel life. The
warmth of the sun, the call of birds at dawn, the cool touch of rain—everything
became a doorway into presence.
One day, while walking alone near the river, Arav sat on a stone and closed his
eyes. He watched his breath, as he had been taught. He watched his thoughts
rise and fall. He didn’t try to stop them. He simply observed. Slowly, a strange
lightness filled him. It was as if he was not his body, not his mind, not even his
name. He was something vast, silent and still.
When he opened his eyes, the world had not changed—but he had. He looked at
the river and saw himself in it. He heard the wind and recognized it as his own
breath. He was no longer a seeker. He had become the seeing itself.
That night, the mystic looked at him and said, “Now you are ready to return.”
“Return?” Arav asked.
“Yes,” the mystic said. “Back to your village. Back to life. But now, live it being
awake. The journey is not to go somewhere. It is to realize there is nowhere to
go—because you are already here.”
The Tale Continues
Arav walked back to his village the next day. The path was the same, but it felt like a different world. He no longer saw separations—between himself and the trees, the sky, or the people. Everything shimmered with life,andhe moved through it with grace and joy.
The villagers noticed the change. He smiled more. He listened deeply. He worked in the fields with presence, sang with the children, and sat silently under the trees, radiating peace. When asked what the mystic had taught him, he would laugh and say, “He taught me how to sit, how to breathe,and how to be.”
Years later, Arav too became a teacher—not of methods or beliefs, but of silence. People would come to him with questions,andhe would offer them tea, a place to sit, and the sound of the wind.
Some understood. Somedidn’t. But all left touched by something they couldn’t name.
“The Mystic's Whisper”
This tale, like many Osho told, is not about answers but about a shift. A shift from the mind to being. From doing to presence. From becoming to simply being. As Osho once said:
“The real journey begins when you stop searching and start seeing.”
Let June be your invitation—not to strive for more, but to sink into the now, and let yourself dissolve in the dance of existence.
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