1. Freedom is independence, no dependence, no fear.
2. If you say "This is what I really want to do and I'm going to pursue it," then something magical will happen. If you persist, you will encounter something or someone to help you. In the process, you may have to starve and struggle, but you will eventually be a valuable person, not just an imitator. If you really dare to be different from the general trend, you will be an independent person and your life will go as you wish.
3. You can't change the outline of a mountain, the flight path of a bird, or the speed of a river, so just observing it and discovering its beauty is enough.
4. We learn to make a living, but we never live. The ability to make a living takes up so much of our lives that we have little time for anything else. We have time to chat, have fun, play games, but all of this is not life. There is a huge area called real life that is completely ignored.
5. You will be in pain, and all mankind will be in pain to varying degrees; you are lonely, and all mankind will know this loneliness. Pain, jealousy, envy, and fear are also known to all. So psychologically, internally, you are the same as everyone else. There may be physical, biological differences—tall or short, etc.—but fundamentally you are a representative of humanity as a whole.
6. Letting go is the highest form of passion. Through complete letting go, the thing called love appears. Love, like humility, cannot be cultivated. Humility appears when all self-deception stops, but at that time you no longer know what humility is. Those who think they are humble are actually vain.
7. A person who strives to become virtuous is numb because he lives in conflict.
8. People are cultivated by ideals. The more gorgeous the ideal, the more respected it is. But understanding everyday life is far more important than ideals. If your heart is filled with ideas, ideals and the like, you will never face the facts that are happening, and ideas will become obstacles. When this is all clearly understood (not intellectually, conceptually), then the crucial thing is to face the truth, the facts, now.
9. You can only study when you have free time. But when your brain or mind is fully occupied, you have no time to spare, so you never learn anything new. No fresh air is coming in, so stress causes increasing damage to the brain. This is one of the questions of meditation - can consciousness be free of all stress, and that means having a free heart.
10. Whatever you are, the world is. So your problems are the world's problems. You and I are the problem, not the world, because the world is a projection of ourselves, and to understand the world we must understand ourselves.
Character introduction:
Chinese name
Jidu Krishnamurti
Foreign name
Jiddu Krishnamurti
Alias ??
Jiddu Krishnamurti
Nationality
Indian
Birth Place
India
Date of birth
May 12, 1895
Date of death
February 1986 January 16
Occupation
Philosopher
Representative works
"Things You Can't Want to Want in Life" "Reunderstanding Yourself"
Biography
Jiddu Krishnamurti (English: Jiddu Krishnamurti, Telugu: Tamil (1895-1986), is recognized as The greatest spiritual teacher of the 20th century. He visited more than 70 countries around the world to give lectures. His lectures were compiled into more than 80 books and translated into more than 50 languages. He was widely used by Indian and contemporary Buddhist scholars. Considered to be the reincarnation of modern Nagarjuna and the contemporary Nirvana Arahant. There are Krishnamurti foundations and schools all over the world, including the United States, Europe, India and Australia, dedicated to promoting the concepts of Krishna compassion and liberation in this world. p>
Jiddu Krishnamurti (May 12, 1895 - February 16, 1986) [1] was elected by the "Theosophical Society" at the age of thirteen. ) adoption.
The "Theosophical Society" has always preached the return of the "World Teacher" (the "Maitreya Reborn" in the East), and believes that he is the coming "World Teacher". He soon became a fearless and unclassifiable teacher whose words and writings belonged to no one religion, neither Eastern nor Western, but the whole world.
Klach's father was a member of the Theosophical Society at that time. The Theosophical Society was co-founded in 1875 by a Russian woman, Madame Blavatsky, and an American military officer, Olcott. Its purpose was to promote transcendence of race and gender. fraternity, class and color, and encourages members to study various ancient traditions such as Kabbalah, Gnosticism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Tibetan esoteric and mystical systems. In 1882, the Theosophical Society established its headquarters in Adyar, India.
This human teacher who was the embodiment of compassion and wisdom spent his entire life leading people into the realm he had achieved, and he was still running until his death at the age of ninety.
The more than 60 volumes of works he left behind are all collections of lectures and speeches emanating from emptiness, which have been translated and published in 47 languages. There are also foundations and schools in Europe, America, India and Australia that promote his career.
Krishnamurti, who is known as the world's most traveled teacher and the most visited person in history, does not like to be called "the master". Although he is highly respected by modern European and American intellectuals, there are still only a few people who truly understand his teachings.
When he entered my house, I couldn't help but said to myself: "This is definitely a Bodhisattva."
——Kahlil Gibran (1883-1931)
Krishnamurti is the only person I know who can completely abandon himself. Meeting him is the most glorious thing in life. thing!
——Henry Miller (1891-1980)
He (Krishnamurti) is the most beautiful human being I have ever seen.
——George Bernard Shaw (George Bernard Shaw, 1856-1950)