Krishnamurti on the Movement of Meditation

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So we are asking now: what is the movement of meditation? First of all we must understand the importance of the senses. Most of us react, or act according to the urges, demands and the insistence of our senses. And those senses never act as a whole but only as a part—right?

Please understand this. If you don’t mind enquiring into this a little more for yourself, talking over together, but all our senses never function, move, operate as a whole, holistically. If you observe yourself and watch your senses you will see that one or the other of the senses becomes dominant. One or the other of the senses takes a greater part in observation in our daily living, so there is always imbalance in our senses – right? May we go on from there?

Now is it possible – this is part of meditation, what we are doing now – is it possible for the senses to operate as a whole; to look at the movement of the sea, the bright waters, the eternally restless waters, to watch those waters completely, with all your senses? Or a tree, or a person, or a bird in flight, a sheet of water, the setting sun, or the rising moon, to observe it, look at it with all your senses fully awakened. … if you observe this, if you observe this operation of the whole senses acting you will find there is no centre from which the senses are moving.

Are you trying this as we are talking together? To look at your girl, or your husband, or your wife or the tree, or the house, with all the highly active sensitive senses. Then in that there is no limitation. You try it. You do it and you will find out for yourself. That is the first thing to understand: the place of the senses. Because most of us operate on partial or particular senses. We never move or live with all our senses fully awakened, flowering. Because as most of us live, operate and think partially, so one of our enquiries into this is for the senses to function fully and realize the importance and the illusion that senses create – are you following all this? And to give the senses their right place, which means not suppressing them, not controlling them, not running away from them but to give the proper place to the senses.

This is important because in meditation, if you want to go into it very deeply, unless one is aware of the senses, they create different forms of neurosis, different forms of illusions, they dominate our emotions and so on and so on. So that is the first thing to realize: if when the senses are fully awakened, flowering then the body becomes extraordinarily quiet. Have you noticed all this? Or am I talking to myself? Because most of us force our bodies to sit still, not fidget, not to move about and so on – you know. Whereas if all the senses are functioning healthily and normally, vitally then the body relaxes and becomes very, very quiet, if you do it. Do it as we are talking.

J. D. Krishnamurti

4th Public Talk, Brockwood Park, 1978

(This article is compiled by Master Trainer Sandip.)

NLP Master Trainer, Sandip Shirsat is a creator of Mindfulness-Based Neuro-Linguistic Programming (MBNLP). Mindfulness-based Neuro-Linguistic Programming is a new dawn in the field of Neuro-Linguistic Programming. Years of research has laid the foundation of MBNLP! This new approach broke down the old perspective towards looking at NLP and provided a solid ground for NLP tools and techniques for human transformation. Mindfulness-based Neuro-Linguistic Programing (MBNLP) is an approach to personal change that uses neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) methods in collaboration with mindfulness meditative practices.

Visit: www.mbnlpc.com to read more content & research articles about Mindfulness-based Neuro-Linguistic Programming.