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Think On These Things PDF
Think On These Things PDF
PhilosophersNotes
TM
Hobgoblins
Behind walls.
The Key:
Love what you do. “As long as you are afraid of anyone or anything, there can be no happiness. There
Joy can be no happiness as long as you are afraid of your parents, your teachers, afraid
Has no contradictions. of not passing examinations, afraid of not making progress, of not getting nearer
The Roots of a Problem to the Master, nearer to truth, or of not being approved of, patted on the back.
Don’t let ‘em get strong! But if you are really not afraid of anything, then you will find—when you wake
A Flower up of a morning, or when you are walking alone—that suddenly a strange thing
That has no perfume.
happens: uninvited, unsolicited, unlooked for, that which may be called love, truth,
The Real Student happiness, is suddenly there.”
Is ALWAYS learning.
~ Krishnamurti from Think on These Things
Get Clear
& Watch things happen.
The contents of Think on These Things were originally presented in the form of talks to students,
Let’s Go Infinitely Far teachers and parents in India and cover everything from culture, religion, politics, education
Shall we? :)
and tradition.
Krishnamurti isn’t the kinda guy who always gives you the warm and fuzzies but he *does* make
you think and fires you up to break out of our conditioned sleep and rock it.
With that, let’s begin our exploration of a handful of my favorite Krishnamurti’s gems!
That’s genius.
“To go far you must begin near, and the nearest step is the most important one.”
“An intelligent mind is an
Too often when we explore ideas or imagine our ideal lives, we get stuck on the FAR and we
inquiring mind, a mind that is
forget the NEAR. The fact is, to “go far” we MUST begin with the near. And, there’s no question
watching, learning, studying.” the nearest step is the most important one.
~ Krishnamurti
This is the essence of effective living. We talk about it in different ways in various Notes, most
specifically in The Power of *TED where we discuss the “dynamic tension” that exists between
your ideal and your current reality—comparing it to a rubber band stretched between two
fingers. If we want to reduce that tension without collapsing our ideal, we MUST accept where
we are and then take the next step. Again and again and again.
No sweat. As Thoreau says: “If you have built your castles in the air, your work need not be
lost; that is where they should be. Now put the foundations under them.”
So, let’s not be a little hobgoblin building walls around ourselves and staring at our shadows,
OK? Thanks. :)
Seriously. Are you locked in a position? Did you *really* strongly believe something yesterday
and now find yourself feeling its opposite today?
GREAT! As Rumi (see Notes) says: “God turns you from one feeling to another and teaches by
means of opposites, so that you will have two wings to fly, not one.”
Laugh. Roll with it. Quit taking yourself quite so seriously. Be fluid. Tear down the walls.
Express yourself. Live.
Loving what you do. Not for the material rewards or power or because you “have to” (have
to? huh?), but because you LOVE doing it. Psychologists would call this having an “intrinsic”
“Not knowing what you motivation—a motivation that comes from WITHIN you. Contrasted, of course, by an “extrinsic”
really want to do, your mind motivation—where you’re compelled by forces outside yourself to do something.
falls into a routine in which Your emotional well-being can be tied to your source of motivation. Where’s yours come from?
there is only boredom, decay Do you love what you do? Or are you going (compulsively) through the motions cuz you feel you
and death. That is why it is have to?
very important to find out
If you do love what you do: YES!!!!!
while you are young what it
is you really *love* to do; If you DON’T love what you do: Ain’t no thang. Just time for some adjustments. Two ways to
and this is the only way to transform: 1. Keep doing what you’re doing and change your perspective from a “have to” or a
create a new society.” “should” to a heartfelt love of what you do; OR, 2. If you feel inspired, you can find something
that you *really* love to do. (And, in the transition, practice loving what you’re currently doing
~ Krishnamurti
because if you don’t get good at that, you’ll soon get pissy about your new thing because we’re
always dancing between that part of ourselves that gets all tied up in the external rewards and
Amen.
And, of course, remember: “I think this is the real key: to love what you do.”
This is a REALLY big theme for Krishnamurti (particularly in this book where he’s addressing
“But freedom is really a students). How ‘bout even more?
state of mind in which
there is no fear or JOY HAS NO CONTRADICTIONS
compulsion, no urge to “Suppose you want to study painting because to paint is the joy of your life, and your father says
be secure.” that you must become a lawyer or a business man, otherwise he will cut you off and not pay for
~ Krishnamurti your education; there is then a contradiction in you, is there not? Now, how are you going to
remove that inner contradiction, to be free of the struggle and the pain of it? As long as you are
caught in self-contradiction you cannot think; so you must remove the contradiction, you must
do one thing or the other. Which will it be? Will you yield to your father? If you do, it means that
you have put away your joy, you have wed something which you do not love; and will that resolve
the contradiction? Whereas, if you withstand your father, if you say, ‘Sorry, I don’t care if I have
to beg, starve, I am going to paint,’ then there is no contradiction; then being and doing are
simultaneous, because you know what you want to do and you do it with your whole heart. But if
you become a lawyer or a business man while inside you are burning to be a painter, then for the
rest of your life you will be a dull, weary human being living in torment, in frustration, in misery,
being destroyed and destroying others.”
Wow. That’s worth a re-read. We’re ALWAYS faced with a choice: acquiesce to the demands
of our society (whether that’s our father or our spouse or our colleagues) or follow our deepest
wisdom. One path leads to “living in torment, in frustration, in misery, being destroyed and
destroying others.” The other path leads, quite simply, to joy.
We talk about this A LOT. That’s deliberate. And, it’s impossible NOT to talk about this theme
because ALL the great teachers point to the fact that we MUST honor our individual paths.
Maslow (see Notes on Motivation and Personality) says:“What one CAN be, one MUST be.”
[Emphasis mine. :] And, he admonishes us: “If you deliberately plan on being less than you are
capable of being, then I warn you that you’ll be unhappy for the rest of your life.”
Gay Hendricks, in his great book The Big Leap says: “You know deep inside you that you will
never be fully satisfied until you have anchored yourself in your Zone of Genius. To do less
would be to hold back, and long ago you made a handshake deal with the universe that you
wouldn’t do that. The seductive comforts of success, though, can lull us into accepting the status
quo. In that state of comfort, it’s easy to forget the deal you made with the universe to use
yourself fully.”
Castaneda tells us to follow the path with heart and when asked how we figure out what the path
with heart is he tells us that we all know, only few of us have the courage to live in integrity with it.
Abraham-Hicks tell us that our primary job is to seek joy—something we can only experience
when we’re honoring our deepest desires.
How about you? Do you have a “contradiction” in your life? Are you out of integrity? Living a life
BRILLIANT.
Now, what do you do? Talk about it? Complain about it? Ruminate on it? That’s like tending to
the weeds in your garden. NOT a good idea. (Unless, of course, you’re growing a weed garden, in
which case, keep on cultivating the ugly stuff!)
If, on the other hand, you’re committed to developing a beautiful life, be careful what you let
take root in your mind.
We’ve got an infinite array of ways we can keep the problems/weeds from getting solid roots and
they’re all grounded in accepting what is (ideally: LOVING what is), choosing an empowering
response to the challenge (why not look for the lesson in it?), and taking effective action (so we
feel good or we feel bad, the only relevant question for the mature human being is: “Now what
needs to be done?”).
So, however you choose to respond to your problems, remember your mind is like rich soil. Don’t
give your problems enough time to take root.
Krishnamurti is basically all about removing the conditioned “shoulds” from our lives.
Rather than do something because we’re “supposed to” or it’s the right thing to do or we “should”
do it, we need to go for it, live intensely and discover for OURSELVES what is true for us.
Otherwise, we may do all the “right” things and be immensely clever, but we’ll be shallow, with
“In this country,
no deep feeling, like a flower that has no perfume.
unfortunately, as all over
the world, we care so little, Krishnamurti continues: “I remember watching two red squirrels, with long bushy tails and
we have no deep feeling lovely fur, chase each other up and down a tall tree for about ten minutes without stopping—just
about anything.” for the joy of living. But you and I cannot know that joy if we do not feel things deeply, if there is
no passion in our lives—passion, not for doing good or bringing about some reform, but passion
~ Krishnamurti
in the sense of feeling something very strongly; and we can have that vital passion only when
there is a total revolution in our thinking, in our whole being.”
Here’s to the total revolution in our thinking that creates vital passion and sends our bushy-
tailed selves up trees! :)
Krishnamurti also says: “To be a real student is to learn all the time.”
Reminds me of Confucius. I don’t know how many times he referred to learning in his
classic book, The Analects (see Notes), but it was a LOT. Things like this: “In a hamlet of ten
households, there are bound to be those who are my equal in doing their best for others and in
being trustworthy in what they say, but they are unlikely to be as eager to learn as I am.”
Plus: “Those who do not study are only cattle dressed up in men’s clothes.”
And: “Even when walking in the company of two other men, I am bound to be able to learn
from them. The good points of the one I copy; the bad points of the other I correct in myself.”
Can you alchemize EVERYTHING into an opportunity to learn? ESPECIALLY the challenging
stuff? See if you can take what used to annoy you and just use it as fuel to deepen your practice.
“The real student is As Marcus Aurelius says (see Notes on Meditations): “So here is a rule to remember in future,
studying, learning, inquiring, when anything tempts you to feel bitter: not, ‘This is a misfortune,’ but ‘To bear this worthily is
exploring, not just until he a good fortune.’”
is twenty or twenty-five, Life is our classroom!!! Let’s get our wisdom on, yo! :)
but throughout life.”
~ Krishnamurti GET CLEAR AND WATCH THINGS HAPPEN
“Sir, life is very strange. The moment you are very clear about what you want to do, things
happen. Life comes to your aid—a friend, a relation, a teacher, a grandmother, somebody helps
you. But if you are afraid to try because your father may turn you out, then you are lost. Life
never comes to the aid of those who merely yield to some demand out of fear. But if you say,
‘This is what I really want to do and I am going to pursue it,’ then you will find that something
miraculous takes place. You may have to go hungry, struggle to get through, but you will be a
worthwhile human being, not a mere copy, and that is the miracle of it.”
Joseph Campbell, who actually met Krishnamurti on a boat from the States to Europe when both
were young men, said the same thing. He called it being helped by “hidden hands” (see Notes on
The Power of Myth for more):
Moyers: “Do you ever have this sense when you are following your bliss, as I have at moments,
of being helped by hidden hands?”
Campbell: “All the time. It is miraculous. I even have a superstition that has grown on me as a
result of invisible hands coming all the time—namely, that if you do follow your bliss you put
yourself on a kind of track that has been there all the while, waiting for you, and the life that
you ought to be living is the one you are living. When you see that, you begin to meet people
who are in the field of your bliss, and they open the doors to you. I say, follow your bliss and
don’t be afraid, and doors will open where you didn’t know they were going to be.”
W.H. Murray, the explorer, recognized the same phenomena and captured it so eloquently in
this passage: “Until one is committed, there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back, always
ineffectiveness concerning all acts of initiative and creation. There is one elementary truth, the
Get intense.
Here’s to just observing what we are and moving with it, being danced by the rhythm of life and
experiencing the divine, vital passion that springs from within,
Brian Johnson,
Chief Philosopher
If you liked this Note, About the Author of “Think on These Things”
you’ll probably like… JIDDU KRISHNAMURTI
Abraham Maslow J. Krishnamurti (May 12, 1895 – February 17, 1986) was a well known writer
The Power of Myth and speaker on philosophical and spiritual subjects. His subject matter
included: psychological revolution, the nature of the mind, meditation, human
Meditations
relationships, and how to enact positive change in society. He constantly stressed
The Fountainhead the need for a revolution in the psyche of every human being and emphasized
Constructive Living that such a revolution cannot be brought about by any external entity whether
religious, political or social. (from Wikipedia where you can learn more!)
The Seven Spiritual Laws
of Success
The Power of *TED
About the Author of This Note
BRIAN JOHNSON