krishnamurti and the direction of the mind

I listened to a session with Krishnamurti’s and I find it quite refreshing to listen to his way of isolating thinking from his other senses. As he clarifies the relationship he has with it. Rationally it is what we all do in relation to our intuition and feeling too. But in doing so, we also tend to isolate it from our direct experience of life. From our interaction with it, and from the processes that affect us from our embodiment of what it is that influences us, and from people around us. There is an allure in doing so, to sense that we are in control of the forces that affect us from the outside. There is always a risk that we ignore the psychological consciousness that mediate what reciprocally affect us from there. We may describe that in many different ways, but it is still the same forces that everyone experiences there in our own personal and cultural way. That is why language and imagination is so important. Without it, we cannot share our intrasubjective experiences of life. Of life in the within of the without. Everyday we all tend to deny each other this in different ways. Through our fear of losing control over that in us we transmit to others when we try to come between them and themselves. Both personally and collectively, which at the same time becomes the world, and the horrors this creates for individuals who becomes opressed by it. Every leader or guru turn people into cattle when we follow them slavishly. I think that is also what Krishnamurti was trying to convey. It is what he and they embody for us in a visible way that is important, what they do with reference to the suprapersonal psyche for others other than themselves, and not only for the people who follows them in a servile way. Anyway, it is interesting with this obsession around thinking and not with the lack of relationship with nature.