But if you are tired of pretending—tired of the anxiety, the competition, the endless chasing of desires that never fulfill—then pull up a chair. Pour some tea. Let the old master speak.
Osho is dangerous. Not because he advocates violence (he is radically against it), but because he destroys your comfort zones. He tells you that your saint is just a repressed sinner. He tells you that your priest is selling a god he has never met. He tells you that your morality is often just cowardice dressed in good manners.
His discourses are a deconstruction of the ego. Using wit that cuts like a surgeon’s scalpel, he targets our sacred cows: religion, politics, family, education, and even spirituality itself. “Mind is a mechanism to avoid reality. It is the only barrier between you and existence.” When you read or watch Osho, he isn’t trying to convince you that he is right. He is trying to shake you awake. He uses paradox as a laxative for the constipated intellect. He wants you to hit a point of confusion so profound that the mind finally gives up—and you simply see .
There are teachers who quote scripture. There are scholars who debate philosophy. And then there is Osho—a force of nature who dismantles both, leaving you naked in the vastness of your own being.
If you want a spiritual path that gives you rules to follow and guarantees of heaven, do not read Osho. He will laugh at your heaven.
Listen to the discourse. Laugh at the jokes. Cry at the truth. And then, when the recording stops, sit in the silence that remains. That silence is the real teaching.
Because in the end, Osho’s only message is this:
This LMC simulator is based on the Little Man Computer (LMC) model of a computer, created by Dr. Stuart Madnick in 1965. LMC is generally used for educational purposes as it models a simple Von Neumann architecture computer which has all of the basic features of a modern computer. It is programmed using assembly code. You can find out more about this model on this wikipedia page.
You can read more about this LMC simulator on 101Computing.net.
Note that in the following table “xx” refers to a memory address (aka mailbox) in the RAM. The online LMC simulator has 100 different mailboxes in the RAM ranging from 00 to 99.
| Mnemonic | Name | Description | Op Code |
| INP | INPUT | Retrieve user input and stores it in the accumulator. | 901 |
| OUT | OUTPUT | Output the value stored in the accumulator. | 902 |
| LDA | LOAD | Load the Accumulator with the contents of the memory address given. | 5xx |
| STA | STORE | Store the value in the Accumulator in the memory address given. | 3xx |
| ADD | ADD | Add the contents of the memory address to the Accumulator | 1xx |
| SUB | SUBTRACT | Subtract the contents of the memory address from the Accumulator | 2xx |
| BRP | BRANCH IF POSITIVE | Branch/Jump to the address given if the Accumulator is zero or positive. | 8xx |
| BRZ | BRANCH IF ZERO | Branch/Jump to the address given if the Accumulator is zero. | 7xx |
| BRA | BRANCH ALWAYS | Branch/Jump to the address given. | 6xx |
| HLT | HALT | Stop the code | 000 |
| DAT | DATA LOCATION | Used to associate a label to a free memory address. An optional value can also be used to be stored at the memory address. |