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J. Krishnamurti Life & Teachings
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- What is love without motive? Can there be love without any
incentive, without wanting something for oneself out of love? Can there
be love in which there is no sense of being wounded when love is not
returned? If I offer you my friendship and you turn away, am I not hurt?
Is that feeling of being hurt the outcome of friendship, of generosity,
of sympathy? Surely, as long as I feel hurt, as long as there is fear,
as long as I help you hoping that you may help me—which is called
service— there is no love. If you understand this, the answer is there.
- Love is not to be cultivated. Love cannot be divided into divine and
physical; it is only love—not that you love many or the one. That again
is an absurd question to ask: “Do you love all?” You know, a flower that
has perfume is not concerned who comes to smell
it, or who turns his back upon it. So is love.
Love is not a memory.
Love is not a thing of the mind or the intellect. But it comes into
being naturally as compassion, when this whole problem of existence—as
fear, greed, envy, despair, hope—has been understood and resolved. An
ambitious man cannot love. A man who is attached to his family has no
love. Nor has jealousy anything to do with love. When you say, “I love
my wife,” you really do not mean it, because the next moment you are
jealous of her.
Love implies great freedom—not to do what you like. But love comes only
when the mind is very quiet, disinterested, not self-centered. These are
not ideals. If you have no love, do what you will—go after all the gods
on earth, do all the social activities, try to reform the poor, the
politics, write books, write poems—you are a dead human being. And
without love your problems will increase, multiply endlessly. And with
love, do what you will, there is no risk; there is no conflict. Then
love is the essence of virtue. And a mind that is not in a state of
love, is not a religious mind at all. And it is only the religious mind
that is freed from problems, and that knows the beauty of love and
truth.
- To love is to experience all things, but to experience without love
is to live in vain. Love is vulnerable, but to experience with out this
vulnerability is to strengthen desire. Desire is not love and desire
cannot hold love. Desire is soon spent and in its spending is sorrow.
Desire cannot be stopped; the ending of desire by will, by any means
that the mind can devise, leads to decay and misery.
Only
love can tame desire, and love is not of the mind.
The mind as the
observer must cease for love to be. Love is not a thing that can be
planned and cultivated; it cannot be bought through sacrifice or through
worship. There is no means to love. The search for a means must come to
an end for love to be. The spontaneous shall know the beauty of love,
but to pursue it ends freedom. To the free alone is there love, but
freedom never directs, never holds. Love is its own eternity.
Krishnaji
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