Found in my in-tray this morning: another thought-provoking passage from Krishnamurti...
"Why
does the mind grow old? It is old, is it not, in the sense of getting
decrepit, deteriorating, repeating itself, caught in habits, sexual
habits, religious habits, job habits, or various habits of ambition. The
mind is so burdened with innumerable experiences and memories, so
marred and scarred with sorrow that it cannot see anything freshly but
is always translating what it sees in terms of its own memories,
conclusions, formulas, always quoting; it is authority-bound; it is an
old mind.
You can see why it happens. All our education is merely the
cultivation of memory; and there is this mass communication through
journals, the radio, the television; there are the professors who read
lectures and repeat the same thing over and over again until your brain
soaks in what they have repeated, and you vomit it up in an examination
and get your degree and go on with the process—the job, the routine, the
incessant repetition. Not only that, but there is also our own inward
struggle of ambition with its frustrations, the competition not only for
jobs but for God, wanting to be near Him, asking the quick road to him.
So,
what is happening is that through pressure, through stress, through
strain, our minds are being crowded, drowned by influence, by sorrow,
consciously or unconsciously... We are wearing down the mind, not using
it"...
No comments:
Post a Comment