Saturday, 05.17.2008, 01:23am (GMT-7)
  Home
  FAQ
  RSS
  Links
  Site Map
  Contact
 
Over 60 dead in Jaipur blasts; curfew imposed ; China earthquake kills 12,000 ; NJ Sikh student's turban set afire ; Tenant shoots dead realtor Joe Gupta ; EU too blames India on prices
::| Keyword:       [Advance Search]
 
NAVIGATION  
  Bollywood
  Community Post
  Health Science
  Horoscope
  Immigration
  India
  Life Style
  Perspective
  Philosophy
  Real Estate
  Sports
  TechBiz
  Travel
  US News
  ::| Poll
Is it fair to blame India for high food prices?
Yes
No
Can't Say
 
  ::| Newsletter
Your Name:
Your Email:
 
 
 
Philosophy
 
There is no such thing in life as comfort & security
Sunday, 05.04.2008, 11:29pm (GMT-7)

Out of suffering is born the urge to seek truth; in suffering lies the cause of the insistent inquiry, the search for truth. Yet when you suffer - as every one does suffer - you seek an immediate remedy and comfort.

When you feel momentary physical pain, you obtain a palliative at the nearest drug store to lessen your suffering. So also, when you experience momentary mental or emotional anguish, you seek consolation, and you imagine that trying to find relief from pain is the search for truth. In that way you are continually seeking a compensation for your pains, a compensation for the effort you are thus forced to make.

You evade the main cause of suffering and thereby live an illusory life. So those people who are always proclaiming that they are searching for truth are in reality missing it. They have found their lives to be insufficient, incomplete, lacking in love, and think that by trying to seek truth they will find satisfaction and comfort.

If you frankly say to yourself that you are seeking only consolation and compensation for the difficulties of life, you will be able to grapple with the problem intelligently. But as long as you pretend to yourself that you are seeking something more than mere compensation, you cannot see the matter clearly.

The first thing to find out, then, is whether you are really seeking, fundamentally seeking truth. A man who is seeking truth is not a disciple of truth. Suppose that you say to me, "I have had no love in my life; it has been a poor life, a life of continuous pain; therefore, in order to gain comfort, I seek truth." Then I must point out that your search for comfort is an utter delusion. There is no such thing in life as comfort and security.

The first thing to understand is that you must be absolutely frank. But you yourself are not certain what you really want: you want comfort, consolation, compensation, and yet, at the same time, you want something that is infinitely greater than compensation and comfort.

You are so confused in your own mind that one moment you look to an authority who offers you compensation and comfort, and the next moment you turn to another who denies you comfort. So your life becomes a refined hypocritical existence, a life of confusion.

Try to find out what you really think; do not pretend to think what you believe you ought to think; then, if you are conscious, fully alive in what you are doing, you will know for yourself, without self-analysis, what you really desire.

If you are fully responsible in your acts, you will then know without self-analysis what you are really seeking. This process of finding out does not necessitate great will power, great strength, but only the interest to discover what you think, to discover whether you are really honest or living in illusion.

In talking to groups of listeners all over the world, I find that more and more people seem not to understand what I am saying, because they come with fixed ideas; they listen with their biased attitude, without trying to find out what I have to say, but only expecting to find what they secretly desire. It is vain to say, "Here is a new ideal after which I must mould myself."

Rather find out what you really feel and think. How can you find out what you really feel and think? From my point of view, you can do that only by being aware of your whole life. Then you will discover to what extent you are a slave to your ideals, and by discovering that, you will see that you have created ideals merely for your consolation.

Where there is duality, where there are opposites, there must be the consciousness of incompleteness. The mind is caught up in opposites, such as punishment and reward, good and bad, past and future, gain and loss. Thought is caught up in this duality, and therefore there is incompleteness in action.

This incompleteness creates suffering, the conflict of choice, effort and authority, and the escape from the unessential to the essential. When you feel that you are incomplete, you feel empty, and from that feeling of emptiness arises suffering; out of that incompleteness you create standards, ideals, to sustain you in your emptiness, and you establish these standards and ideals as your external authority.

As long as you do not understand the cause of authority, you are but an imitative machine, and where there is imitation there cannot be the rich fulfillment of life. Excerpted from first public talk, Alpino, Italy, 1933

J KRISHNAMURTI

Comments (0)        Print        Tell friend        Top


Other Articles:
Reviving the religious values of India (04.30.2008)
In order to find Him you must embrace all (04.30.2008)
Individual identity is a spiritual disease (04.20.2008)
Role of Hanuman in esoteric Ramayana (04.20.2008)
Young Rama pleads for deliverance from grief (04.13.2008)
'Injury to others is injury to oneself' (04.13.2008)
The basis of success in all human endeavors (04.09.2008)
Nature of love is union, nature of ego is separation (04.09.2008)
All 'knowledge' and 'cognition' is insufficient: Lao Zi (03.31.2008)
Who was greater, Buddha, Rama or Krishna? (03.24.2008)



 
  ::| Events
May 2008  
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
 

Contact us:
(510) 429 - 2110
[Top Page]