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Jiddu krishnamurti
: It
was one of those lovely mornings that have never been before. The
sun was just coming up and you saw it between the eucalyptus and the
pine. It was over the waters, golden, burnished such light that
exists only between the mountains and the sea.
It was such a clear morning, breathless, full of that strange light
that one sees not only with one's eyes but with one's heart. And
when you see it the heavens are very close to earth, and you are
lost in the beauty. You know, you should never meditate in public,
or with another, or in a group: you should meditate only in
solitude, in the quiet of the night or in the still, early morning.
When you meditate in solitude, it must be solitude. You must
be completely alone, not following a system, a method, repeating
words, or pursuing a thought, or shaping a thought according to your
desire. This solitude comes when the mind is freed from thought.
When there are influences of desire or of the things that the mind
is pursuing, either in the future or in the past, there is no
solitude.
Only in the immensity of the present this aloneness comes. And then,
in quiet secrecy in which all communication has come to an end, in
which there is no observer with his anxieties, with his stupid
appetites and problems only then, in that quiet aloneness,
meditation becomes something that cannot be put into words. Then
meditation is an eternal movement.
I don't know if you have ever meditated, if you have ever been
alone, by yourself, far away from everything, from every person,
from every thought and pursuit, if you have ever been completely
alone, not isolated, not withdrawn into some fanciful dream or
vision, but far away, so that in yourself there is nothing
recognizable, nothing that you touch by thought or feeling, so far
away that in this full solitude the very silence becomes the only
flower, the only light, and the timeless quality that is not
measurable by thought.
Only in such meditation love has its being. Don't bother to express
it: it will express itself. Don't use it. Don't try to put it into
action: it will act, and when it acts, in that action there is no
regret, no contradiction, none of the misery and travail of man.
So meditate alone. Get lost. And don't try to remember where
you have been. If you try to remember it then it will be something
that is dead. And if you hold on to the memory of it then you will
never be alone again. So meditate in that endless solitude, in the
beauty of that love, in that innocency, in the new then there is the
bliss that is imperishable.
The sky is very blue, the blue that comes after the rain, and
these rains have come after many months of drought. After the rain
the skies are washed clean and the hills are rejoicing, and the
earth is still. And every leaf has the light of the sun on it, and
the feeling of the earth is very close to you. So meditate in the
very secret recesses of your heart and mind, where you have never
been before.
Source: from book "Meditations
1969 Part 8" by
Jiddu Krishnamurti
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