Iron out problems

If you look at the world today you will find problems everywhere. You will be terrified and will shut your eyes, or feel bogged down and try to drown the problems in drinks or in drugs. These are merely escape routes.
Osho has come up with a novel suggestion: he says, “Do not call problem a ‘problem’, call it a situation”. Immediately your attitude towards the situation will change. The mind lives in labels, and the moment we label something as negative, the mind doesn’t want to look at it. The brain enters a deadlock, it is blocked by fear and worry and our thinking capacity goes in a negative mode.
Simple things like a leaking water tap or a fused light bulb, or an unironed dress seem to be big problem for people. Life will become very stressful if we look at these day-to-day incidents as problems.
Can life stop being a hurdles race and become a dance of joy and music? Yes, if you can look upon a problem as a new situation or even a challenging situation. Take a high jump and say “Yahoo!” because these situations activate that unconscious part of the brain which normally we do not use. Unless we encounter difficulties and are pushed to the wall we do not tap our hidden resources. Usually the brain gets trapped into thinking along the same old lines and appear to be incapable of breaking free. What we require on such occasions is to press a “pause” button of our conscious brain and allow our deep unconscious to come up with answers. It has a great creative energy so it is exciting to deliberately engage different parts of the brain in the problem-solving process. This is an essential part of creative thinking. Maybe the situation will not change but your attitude towards it will definitely change. This changed attitude will open you up to look into the situation.
The mystery of existence is such that the answer lies within the question. It is like diving into a whirlpool: If you fight the current you will be drowned, but if you let go and whirl with the circular motion the current itself will throw you on the surface.
Osho says, “Look at the question deeply, and if the look is clear and total, the question disappears. No question is ever answered, it simply disappears; and it disappears without a trace. All that you have to do is put the analytical mind away. When the unconscious finds the solution there is a leap of understanding which seems to come out of the blue.”

Amrit Sadhana is in the management team of Osho International Meditation Resort, Pune. She facilitates meditation workshops around the country and abroad.

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