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- A mind that is crowded, encased in facts, in
knowledge - is it capable of receiving something new, sudden,
spontaneous? If your mind is crowded with the known, is there any space
in it to receive something that is of the unknown? Surely knowledge is
always of the known; and with the known we are trying to understand the
unknown, something which is beyond measure.
- If you really want to find truth, you must be
extremely honest,
not merely at the verbal level but altogether; you must be
extraordinarily clear, and you cannot be clear if you are unwilling to
face facts.
- Do not think by merely wishing for peace, you
will have peace, when in your daily life of relationship you are
aggressive, acquisitive, seeking psychological security here or in the
hereafter. You have to understand the central cause of conflict and
sorrow and then dissolve it and not merely look to the outside for
peace.
- Truth can only come to the mind that is empty
of the known. It comes in a state in which the known is absent, not
functioning. The mind is the warehouse of the known, the residue of the
known; for the mind to be in that state in which the unknown comes into
being, it must be aware of itself, of
its previous experiences, the conscious as well as the unconscious, of
its responses, reactions, and structure. When there is complete
self-knowledge, then there is the ending of the known, then the mind is
completely empty of the known. It is only then that truth can come to
you uninvited. Truth
does not belong to you or to me. You cannot worship it. The moment it is
known, it is unreal. The symbol is not real, the image is not real; but
when there is the understanding of self, the cessation of self, then
eternity comes into being.
- 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 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.
- As you watch anything—a tree, your wife, your
children, your neighbor, the stars of a night, the light on the
water, the bird in the sky, anything—there is always the observer—the
censor, the thinker the experiencer, the seeker—and the thing he is
observing; the observer and the observed; the thinker and the thought.
So, there is always a division. It is this division that is time. That
division is the very essence of conflict. And when there is conflict,
there is contradiction. There is “the observer and the observed”—that is
a contradiction; there is a separation. And hence where there is
contradiction, there is conflict. And when there is conflict, there is
always the urgency to get beyond it, to conquer it, to overcome it, to
escape from it, to do something about it, and all that activity involves
time.... As long as there is this division, time will go on, and time is
sorrow.
And a man who will understand the end of sorrow must
understand this, must find, must go beyond this duality between the
thinker and the thought, the experiencer and the experienced. That is,
when there is a division between the observer and the observed, there is
time, and therefore there is no ending of sorrow. Then, what is one to
do? You understand the question? I see, within myself, the observer is
always watching, judging, censoring, accepting, rejecting, disciplining,
controlling, shaping. That observer, that thinker, is the result of
thought, obviously. Thought is first; not the observer, not the thinker.
If there was no thinking at all, there would be no observer, no thinker;
then there would only be complete, total
attention.
J
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