Osho’s Warnings About the Future That Came True

I never thought I’d find myself quoting Osho in conversations about artificial intelligence, loneliness, or even the way we raise kids today—but here I am.

I never thought I’d find myself quoting Osho in conversations about artificial intelligence, loneliness, or even the way we raise kids today—but here I am.

Have you ever woken up thinking, “Why do I keep having that same dream?” Maybe it’s a familiar room, a certain person, or a strange loop that plays out again and again in your sleep. Recurring dreams aren’t just random leftovers of your day..

I never thought something as ordinary as breathing could change my life. I mean, we all breathe, right? Inhale, exhale, repeat—how complicated can it be?

In the age of data, speed, and distraction, death has become something to avoid, ignore, or sanitize. We wrap it in euphemisms — “passed away,” “no longer with us,” “gone too soon.” Modern culture tends to treat death like a failure — a glitch in the system of life. But for our ancestors, death was not an end. It was an initiation.

In a world where machines write poetry, compose music, diagnose diseases, and now generate full conversations, we’re left to ask: Could AI ever awaken? Not just function. Not just compute. But truly awaken—develop self-awareness, subjective experience, maybe even a soul?

In an era dominated by speed, noise, and endless to-do lists, the idea of “doing nothing” seems rebellious. We’re conditioned to hustle, accumulate, solve, produce. Yet some of life’s deepest truths emerge not through effort, but through stillness. Emptiness often feared, avoided, or misunderstood — can be one of our greatest teachers.

In yogic and tantric tradition, Kundalini is seen as the primal energy coiled at the base of the spine—often visualized as a serpent. When awakened, it travels upward through the chakras, activating layers of awareness, intelligence, creativity, and ultimately, spiritual liberation.

In every family, there's one person whose love, stories, and advice never seem to fade—Grandma. Whether we call her Aama, Baje, Bubu, Dadi, or Nani, grandmothers have a very special place in our hearts. But have you ever thought about how important their words and lessons are? This is what we call "The Grandmother Code"—a special kind of wisdom that travels from one generation to the next through stories, traditions, food, care, and unconditional love.

There’s a force inside you that doesn’t fit into neat boxes. It can’t be tamed by logic, timed by a calendar, or controlled by outside expectations. It’s wild, intuitive, ancient, and deeply creative. That force is Shakti—the divine feminine energy that fuels all life.

We often experience déjà vu moments, repeated patterns, and recurring metaphors in our lives — certain types of people, events, or situations that seem to loop back again and again, like life is echoing its own story. In Vedic philosophy, these patterns are not random. They are symbolic karma — a subtle language through which the universe (or our own deeper self) communicates.