- Have you ever asked that question, for
yourself? Why is your mind so restless, always
chattering, going from one thing to another,
moving from one entertainment to another? Why is
your mind chattering? And what will you do about
it? Your immediate impulse is to control it: "I
must not chatter". The controller who says, "I
must not chatter", is in itself part of
chattering. Do you see the beauty of it?
- Our problem is not, how to make the mind
tranquil, still, peaceful, but, to understand,
to be free from those problems which agitate the
mind. The mind obviously creates the problems.
If there is a problem, how do we approach it,
with what attitude? How do we experience it? It
is that which it is important to understand, and
not, how to escape from the problem into
tranquillity.
- Gossip is an expression of a restless mind;
but merely to be silent does not indicate a
tranquil mind, Tranquillity does not come into
being with abstinence or denial; it comes with
the understanding of what is. To understand what
is needs swift awareness, for what is is not
static.
- A petty mind can never find that which is
beyond the mind, and a conditioned mind is a
petty mind whether it believes in God or not.
That is why all the beliefs and dogmas that we
hold, all the authorities, especially the
spiritual authorities, have to be put aside, and
only then is there a possibility of finding that
which is everlasting, timeless.
- Without understanding the process of
thought, how thought comes into being, the ways
of your own individual thinking, how your
thought is driven by motives, by desires, by
anxieties, - without knowing the whole content
of thought you cannot possibly bring about
tranquillity.
- So the mind, through understanding itself at
all its different levels, comes to a state when
it is still. And this is not a long, tedious,
tiresome, boring process. You know very well
what you think and what you feel, if you are at
all aware, sensitive to yourself. You do not
have to be analysed, dissected, - that is a lazy
man's game. But we know, actually inwardly, our
own conflicts, and the cause of those conflicts,
their significance, what lies behind them. But
we don't want to look at it, we don't want to
face it. And so, we play around in circles,
never coming to the centre.
- The mind which is not calling upon
knowledge, which is not living in memory, which
is totally emptying itself of the past, dying to
every form of accumulation from moment to moment
- it is only such a mind that can be in a state
of not-knowing, which is the highest form of
thinking; and then thinking has a different
meaning altogether. It may not be thinking at
all, as we know it, but a state of being which
is not merely the opposite of not-being.
- A mind that is truly inquiring is not
accumulating. It is the accumulating mind that
is petty, whether it is accumulating knowledge,
or money, power, position. When you see the
truth of that totally, there is real
transformation of the mind, and it is such a
mind that is capable of dealing with the many
problems.
- After all, a mind that is vain, arrogant, full of the desire for power, and that tries to cultivate humility, is occupied with itself; therefore it is a petty mind. The mind that is trying to improve itself through the acquisition of knowledge, that is trying to become very clever, to be more powerful, to have a better job - such a mind is petty. It may occupy itself with God, with truth, with the Atman, or with sitting in the seats of the mighty, but it is still a petty mind.
see and follow see and follow see and follow ::::::::: INNERLIGHT and INNERSOUND
Sunday, February 12, 2012
Jiddu Krishnamurti Quotes on Mind
Labels:
SPIRITUALITY
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment