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- In the state of passion without a cause, there is intensity free of
all attachment; but when
passion has a cause, there is attachment and attachment is the beginning
of sorrow. Most
of us are attached; we cling to a person, to a country, to a belief, to
an idea, and when the
object of our attachment is taken away or otherwise loses its
significance, we find
ourselves empty, insufficient. This emptiness we try to fill by clinging
to something else,
which again becomes the object of our passion.
- For the discovery of truth there is no path.
You must enter the uncharted sea - which is not depressing, which is not
being adventurous. When you want to find something new, when you are
experimenting with anything, your mind has to be very quiet, has it not?
If your mind is crowded, filled with facts, knowledge, they act as an
impediment to the new; the difficulty is for most of us that the mind
has become so important, so predominantly significant, that it
interferes constantly with anything that may be new, with anything that
may exist simultaneously with the known.
- Surely, only in relationship the process of what I am unfolds, does
it not? Relationship is
a mirror in which I see myself as I am; but as most of us do not like
what we are, we
begin to discipline, either positively or negatively, what we perceive
in the mirror of
relationship. That is, I discover something in relationship, in the
action of relationship,
and I do not like it. So, I begin to modify what I do not like, what I
perceive as being
unpleasant.
I want to change it—which means I already have a pattern of
what I should
be. The moment there is a pattern of what I should be, there is no
comprehension of what
I am. The moment I have a picture of what I want to be, or what I should
be, or what I
ought not to be—a standard according to which I want to change
myself—then, surely,
there is no comprehension of what I am at the moment of relationship.
I think it is really important to understand this, for I think this is
where most of us go
astray. We do not want to know what we actually are at a given moment in
relationship.
If we are concerned merely with self-improvement, there is no
comprehension of
ourselves, of what is.
- The image you have about a person, the image you have about your
politicians, the prime
minister, your god, your wife, your children—that image is being looked
at. And that
image has been created through your relationship, or through your fears,
or through your
hopes. The sexual and other pleasures you have had with your wife, your
husband, the
anger, the flattery, the comfort, and all the things that your family
life brings—a deadly
life it is—have created an image about your wife or husband. With that
image you look.
Similarly, your wife or husband has an image about you. So the
relationship between you
and your wife or husband, between you and the politician is really the
relationship
between these two images. Right? That is a fact. How can two images
which are the
result of thought, of pleasure and so on, have any affection or love?
So the relationship between two individuals, very close together or very
far, is a
relationship of images, symbols, memories. And in that, how can there be
real love?
J
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