Creative emptiness is not possible so long as there is the thinker
who is waiting, watching, observing in order to gather experience, in
order to strengthen himself. Can the mind ever be empty of all symbols,
of all words with their sensations, so that there is no experiencer who
is accumulating? Is it possible for the mind to put aside completely all
the reasonings, the experiences, the impositions, authorities, so that
it is in a state of emptiness? You will not be able to answer this
question, naturally; it is an impossible question for you to answer,
because you do not know, you have never tried. But, if I may suggest,
listen to it, let the question be put to you, let the seed be sown; and
it will bear fruit if you really listen to it, if you do not resist it.
It
is only the new that can transform, not the old. If you pursue the
pattern of the old, any change is a modified continuity of the old;
there is nothing new in that, there is nothing creative. The creative
can come into being only when the mind itself is new; and the mind can
renew itself only when it is capable of seeing all its own activities,
not only at the superficial level, but deep down. When the mind sees its
own activities, is aware of its own desires, demands, urges, pursuits,
the creation of its own authorities, fears; when it sees in itself the
resistance created by discipline, by control, and the hope which
projects beliefs, ideals - when the mind sees through, is aware of this
whole process, can it put aside all these things and be new, creatively
empty? You will find out whether it can or cannot only if you experiment
without having an opinion about it, without wanting to experience that
creative state. If you want to experience it, you will; but what you
experience is not creative emptiness, it is only a projection of desire.
If you desire to experience the new, you are merely indulging in
illusion; but if you begin to observe, to be aware of your own
activities from day to day, from moment to moment, watching the whole
process of yourself as in a mirror, then, as you go deeper and deeper,
you will come to the ultimate question of this emptiness in which alone
there can be the new.
J. Krishnamurti
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
Thursday, February 9, 2012
The First and Last Freedom
Perhaps, in coming to this point, we have used the conscious mind; we
have followed the argument, we have opposed or accepted it, we have
seen it clearly or dimly. To go further and experience more deeply
requires a mind that is quiet and alert to find out, does it not? It is
no longer pursuing ideas because, if you pursue an idea, there is the
thinker following what is being said and so you immediately create
duality. If you want to go further into this matter of fundamental
change, is it not necessary for the active mind to be quiet? Surely it
is only when the mind is quiet that it can understand the enormous
difficulty, the complex implications of the thinker and the thought as
two separate processes, the experiencer and the experienced, the
observer and the observed. Revolution, this psychological, creative
revolution in which the 'me' is not, comes only when the thinker and the
thought are one, when there is no duality such as the thinker
controlling thought; and I suggest it is this experience alone that
releases the creative energy which in turn brings about a fundamental
revolution, the breaking up of the psychological 'me'.
We know the way of power - power through domination, power through discipline, power through compulsion. Through political power we hope to change fundamentally; but such power only breeds further darkness, disintegration evil, the strengthening of the 'me'. We are familiar with the various forms of acquisition, both individually and as groups, but we have never tried the way of love, and we don't even know what it means. Love is not possible so long as there is the thinker, the centre of the 'me'.
(to be continued)
J. Krishnamurti
We know the way of power - power through domination, power through discipline, power through compulsion. Through political power we hope to change fundamentally; but such power only breeds further darkness, disintegration evil, the strengthening of the 'me'. We are familiar with the various forms of acquisition, both individually and as groups, but we have never tried the way of love, and we don't even know what it means. Love is not possible so long as there is the thinker, the centre of the 'me'.
(to be continued)
J. Krishnamurti
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