THE LINK
The Newsletter Editorial Note
Dear Friends
K: The Light Of Meditation Krishnamurti Letters to the Editor
Articles Toward Understanding Consciousness
Keep Far Away
Tower Lessons
If We Could Establish a Relationship with Nature
What Is the Core of Human Confusion?
On Sensuality
The Transformative Psychology of J. Krishnamurti (Part 1)
The Transformative Psychology of J. Krishnamurti (Part 2)
To Be Free of the Word
On Education Unlocking Key Insights at the Oak Grove Teacher's Academy
K: On Self-knowledge
Confessions of a Science Teacher
Mathematics for the Millions: a personal story
Our Children and the Real World
The Oak Grove school trip to India
K: To Bring Up Children without Comparison
International Network
International Report: Ukraine, Turkey and Azerbaijan
K: Order that Continues into Sleep
Events Theme Weekends at The Krishnamurti Centre, Brockwood Park 2007 Annual Saanen Gathering 2007 in Switzerland Summer Work Party at Brockwood Park 2007 Oak Grove Teacher's Academy 2007 Krishnamurti Summer Study Program 2007 Annual Gatherings in India, USA, Thailand
Announcements |
On Sensuality Krishnamurti Sensuality in the world of pleasure has become very important. Taste dictates and soon the habit of pleasure takes hold; though it may harm the whole organism, pleasure dominates. Pleasure of the senses, of cunning and subtle thought, of words and of the images of mind and hand is the culture of education, the pleasure of violence and the pleasure of sex. Man is moulded to the shape of pleasure, and all existence, religious or otherwise, is the pursuit of it. The wild exaggerations of pleasure are the outcome of moral and intellectual conformity. When the mind is not free and aware, then sensuality becomes a factor of corruption which is what is going on in the modern world. Pleasure of money and sex dominate. When man has become a second-hand human being, the expression of sensuality is his freedom. Then love is pleasure and desire. Organised entertainment, religious or commercial, makes for social and personal immorality; you cease to be responsible. Responding wholly to any challenge is to be responsible, totally committed. This cannot be when the very essence of thought is fragmentary and the pursuit of pleasure, in all its obvious and subtle forms, is the principal movement of existence. Pleasure is not joy; joy and pleasure are entirely different things; the one is uninvited and the other cultivated, nurtured; the one comes when the ‘me’ is not and the other is time-binding; where the one is the other is not. Pleasure, fear and violence run together; they are inseparable companions. Learning from observation is action, the doing is the seeing. Krishnamurti’s Journal, pg. 68 |