THE LINK
Issue No. 26

PDF Version

The Newsletter

Editorial Note
by Javier Gomez Rodriguez

Dear Friends
by Friedrich Grohe

K: The Light Of Meditation Krishnamurti

Letters to the Editor

Seeing that nothing
can be done is mutation


The material limitation of
a science of consciousness


Mind and brain

Articles

Toward Understanding Consciousness
by Dr. John H. Hidley

Keep Far Away
Krishnamurti

Tower Lessons
by Suprabha Seshan

If We Could Establish a Relationship with Nature
Krishnamurti

What Is the Core of Human Confusion?
by Paul Dimmock

On Sensuality
Krishnamurti

The Transformative Psychology of J. Krishnamurti (Part 1)
by Stephen Smith

The Transformative Psychology of J. Krishnamurti (Part 2)
by Stephen Smith

To Be Free of the Word
Krishnamurti


On Education

Unlocking Key Insights at the Oak Grove Teacher's Academy
by Paul Herder

K: On Self-knowledge
Krishnamurti

Confessions of a Science Teacher
by Colin Foster

Mathematics for the Millions: a personal story
by Ashna Sen

Our Children and the Real World
by Venkatesh Onkar

The Oak Grove school trip to India
by Dave Anter

K: To Bring Up Children without Comparison
Krishnamurti


International Network

International Report: Ukraine, Turkey and Azerbaijan
by Raman Patel

K: Order that Continues into Sleep
Krishnamurti

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

New Initiatives in India

Publications

Obituaries

Order that Continues into Sleep

Krishnamurti

The total awareness of disorder in relationship both private and public, personal and distant, an awareness of what is without any choice during conscious hours during the day, brings order out of disorder. Then the brain has no need to seek order during sleep. Then dreams are only superficial, without meaning. Order in the whole of consciousness, not merely at the conscious level, takes place when division between the observer and the observed ceases completely. What is, is transcended when the observer who is the past, who is time, comes to an end. The active present, the what is, is not in the bondage of time as the observer is.

Only when the mind – the brain and the organism – during sleep has this total order, is there an awareness of that wordless state, that timeless movement. This is not some fanciful dream, an abstraction of escape. It is the very summation of meditation. That is, the brain is active, waking or sleeping, but the constant conflict between order and disorder wears down the brain. Order is the highest form of virtue, sensitivity, intelligence. When there is this great beauty of order, harmony, the brain is not endlessly active; certain parts of it have to carry the burden of memory but that is a very small part; the rest of the brain is free from the noise of experience. That freedom is the order, the harmony, of silence. This freedom and the noise of memory move together; intelligence is the action of this movement. Meditation is freedom from the known and yet operating in the field of the known. There is no ‘me’ as the operator. In sleep or awake this meditation goes on.

Krishnamurti’s Journal, pg. 66,
© 1982 by Krishnamurti Foundation Trust Ltd.