Jiddu Krishnamurti - All becoming is disintegration
- Jiddu Krishnamurti: 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 which 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.
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