"A man who says 'I know' is the most destructive human being because he
really does not know. What does he know? So when you are conscious you
are transformed, when you are aware that you are transformed, you are
not." - J.K
Sunday, November 4, 2012
Thursday, October 18, 2012
The beauty of listening
"The beauty of listening lies in being highly sensitive to everything
about you: to the ugliness, to the dirt, to the squalor, to the poverty
about you, and also to the dirt, to the disorder, to the poverty of
one's own being. When you are aware of both, then there is no effort,
that is, when there is an awareness which is without choice, then there
is no effort." - J.K
Thursday, July 26, 2012
The very fact of being aware of what is is truth
"It is extremely difficult to b aware of dullness, to be aware of greed,
to be aware of ill-will, ambition, and so on. The very fact of being
aware of 'what is' is truth. It is truth that liberates, not your
striving to be free. Thus, reality is not far, but we place it far away
because we try to use it as a means of self-continuity. It is here, now,
in the immediate. The eternal or the timeless is now and the now cannot
be understood by a man who is caught in the net of time. To free
thought from time demands action, but the mind is lazy, it is slothful,
and therefore ever creates other hindrances.It is only possible by right
meditation, which means complete action not a continuous action, and
complete action can only be understood when the mind comprehends the
process of continuity, which is memory - not the factual but the
psychological memory. As long as memory functions, the mind cannot
understand 'what is'. But one's mind, one's whole being, becomes
extraordinarily creative, passively alert, when one understands the
significance of ending, because in ending there is renewal, while in
continuity there is death, there is decay. The very fact of being aware
of 'what is' is truth. The timeless is now and the now cannot be
understood. The mind cannot understand what is." - J.K
Monday, June 25, 2012
It is only when there is friction that there is noise
"Meditation is to find out whether the brain, with all the activities,
all its experiences, can be absolutely quiet. Not forced, because the
moment you force, there is duality. The entity that says, 'I would like
to have marvelous experiences, therefore I must force my brain to be
quiet,' will never do it. But if you begin to inquire, observe, listen
to all the movements of thought, its conditioning, its pursuits, its
fears, its pleasures, watch how the brain operates, then you will see
that the brain becomes extraordinarily quiet; that quietness is not
sleep but is tremendously active and therefore quiet. A big dynamo that
is working perfectly hardly makes a sound; it is only when there is
friction that there is noise." - J.K
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
Is there thought without the word?
Questioner: Can there be thinking without memory? Krishnamurti: "In other
words, is there thought without the word? You know, it is very
interesting, if you go into it. Is the speaker using thought? Thought,
as the word, is necessary for communication, is it not? The speaker has
to use words, English words, to communicate with you who understand
English. And the words come out of memory, obviously. But what is the
source, what is behind the word? Let me put it differently. There is a
drum; it gives out a tone. When the skin is tightly stretched at the
right tension, you strike it, and it gives out the right tone, which you
may recognize. The drum, which is empty, in right tension, is as your
own mind can be. When there is right attention and you ask the right
question, then it gives the right answer. The answer may be in terms of
the word, the recognizable, but that which comes out of that emptiness
is, surely, creation. The thing that is created out of knowledge is
mechanical, but the thing which comes out of emptiness, out of the
unknown, that is the state of creation." - J. Krishnamurti
If you can really understand this, then the seed of that radical revolution has already been planted
"Change comes into being when there is no fear, when there is neither the
experiencer nor the experience; it is only then that there is the
revolution which is beyond time. But that cannot be as long as I am
trying to change the 'I', as long as I am trying to change what is into
something else. I am the result of all the social and the spiritual
compulsions, persuasions, and all the conditioning based on
acquisitiveness -my thinking is based on that. To be free from that
conditioning, from that acquisitiveness, I say to myself, 'I must not be
acquisitive; I must practice nonacquisitiveness.' But such action is
still within the field of time, it is still the activity of the mind.
Just see that. Don't say, 'How am I to get to that state when I am
nonacquisitive?' That is not important. It is not important to be
nonacquisitive; what is important is to understand that the mind which
is trying to get away from one state to another is still functioning
within the field of time, and therefore there is no revolution, there is
no change. If you can really understand this, then the seed of that
radical revolution has already been planted and that will operate: you
have not a thing to do." - J. Krishnamurti, Collected Works, Vol. VIII,163,Choiceless
Awareness
Monday, March 19, 2012
Why Change?
"Man has lived for two million years or more, but he has not solved the problem of sorrow. He is always sorrow-ridden: he has sorrow as his shadow or as his companion. Sorrow of losing somebody; sorrow in not being able to fulfill his ambitions, his greed, his energy; sorrow of physical pain; sorrow of psychological anxiety; sorrow of guilt; sorrow of hope and despair - that has been the lot of man; that has been the lot of every human being. And he has always tried to solve this problem - to end sorrow within the field of consciousness, by trying to avoid it, by running away from sorrow, by suppressing it, by identifying himself with something greater than himself, by taking to drink, to women, by doing everything in order to avoid this anxiety, this pain, this despair, this immense loneliness and boredom of life - which is always within this field of consciousness, which is the result of time." - J. Krishnamurti, What Are You Doing with Your Life?
Freedom is at the beginning
"I think it is important to understand that freedom is at the beginning and not at the end. We think freedom is something to be achieved, that liberation is an ideal state of mind to be gradually attained through time, through various practices; but to me, this is a totally wrong approach. Freedom is not to be achieved; liberation is not a thing to be gained. Freedom, or liberation, is that state of mind which is essential for the discovery of any truth, any reality, therefore it cannot be an ideal; it must exist right from the beginning. Without freedom at the beginning, there can be no moments of direct understanding, because all thinking is then limited, conditioned. If your mind is tethered to any conclusion, to any experience, to any form of knowledge or belief, it is not free; and such a mind cannot possibly perceive what is truth." - J. Krishnamurti, Bombay 1st Public Talk 4th March 1956
Thursday, February 16, 2012
Action Without Idea
"It is only when the mind is free from idea that there can be experiencing. Ideas are not truth; and truth is something that must be experienced directly, from moment to moment. It is not an experience which you want, which is then merely sensation. Only when one can go beyond the bundle of ideas, which is the 'me', which is the mind, which has a partial or complete continuity, only when one can go beyond that, when thought is completely silent, is there a state of experiencing. Then one shall know what truth is." - J. Krishnamurti, The Book of Life
Thursday, February 2, 2012
All Becoming Is Disintegration
"The mind has an idea, perhaps pleasurable, and it wants to be like that idea, which is a projection of your desire. You are this, which you do not like, and you want to become that, which you like. The ideal is a self-projection; the opposite is an extension of what is; it is not the opposite at all, but a continuity of what is, perhaps somewhat modified. The projection is self-willed, and conflict is the struggle towards the projection. You are struggling to become something, and that something is part of yourself. The ideal is your own projection. See how the mind has played a trick upon itself. You are struggling after words, pursuing your own projection, your own shadow. You are violent, and you are struggling to become nonviolent, the ideal; but the ideal is a projection of what is, only under a different name.When you are aware of this trick that you have played upon yourself, then the false as the false is seen. The struggle towards an illusion is the disintegrating factor. All conflict, all becoming is disintegration. When there is an awareness of this trick that the mind has played upon itself, then there is only what is. When the mind is stripped of all becoming, of all ideals, of all comparison and condemnation, when its own structure has collapsed, then the what is has undergone complete transformation. As long as there is the naming of what is, there is relationship between the mind and what is; but when this naming process - which is memory, the very structure of the mind -is not, then what is is not. In this transformation alone is there integration." - J. Krishnamurti, The Book of Life
Sunday, January 1, 2012
Beyond the Noise of Words
"Listening is an art not easily come by, but in it there is beauty and great understanding. We listen with the various depths of our being, but our listening is always with a preconception or from a particular point of view. We do not listen simply; there is always the intervening screen of our own thoughts, conclusions, and prejudices. To listen there must be an inward quietness, a freedom from the strain of acquiring, a relaxed attention. This alert yet passive state is able to hear what is beyond the verbal conclusion. Words confuse; they are only the outward means of communication; but to commune beyond the noise of words, there must be in listening an alert passivity. Those who love may listen; but it is extremely rare to find a listener. Most of us are after results, achieving goals; we are forever overcoming and conquering, and so there is no listening. It is only in listening that one hears the song of the words." - J. Krishnamurti, The Book of Life
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