Wise Words
Home
Read
Write
Publish
Profile
Logout
For Modern Life Transformation.
कणिका
<br><br><div class='ui image'><img width='1200px' src='images/71179157-ChatGPT Image Jul 8, 2026, 10_06_00 PM.png'></div><br><br> **Observation by Kanika** If you are walking the path of knowledge, but still finding it difficult to move into true awareness and **Nididhyasana**, then the teachings of **J. Krishnamurti** can be deeply relevant for modern life transformation. Many seekers study Vedanta, reflect on scriptures, and understand spiritual ideas intellectually. Yet, sometimes, the movement from knowledge to direct awareness does not happen easily. The mind continues to remain caught in patterns, conditioning, reactions, fears, memories, and old habits of thought. J. Krishnamurtis teachings offer a powerful bridge for this inner movement. He does not ask us to escape life, follow a fixed method, or depend blindly on any tradition. Instead, he invites us to observe ourselves directly in daily life. As Krishnamurti said: > Truth is a pathless land. This is a powerful reminder that truth cannot be reached only through belief, system, ritual, or borrowed knowledge. It has to be discovered directly within oneself. He also pointed toward the importance of observing without motive: > When you have no motive you are free to observe your conditioning. This is very close to the spirit of **Nididhyasana**. The seeker does not merely think about truth, but begins to watch the movement of thought, ego, fear, desire, and conditioning as they arise. Krishnamurti also said: > Awareness means the observer is not. This insight is profound. Usually, we observe life from the position of me my opinion, my fear, my conclusion, my memory, my hurt. But true awareness begins when this separate observer becomes quiet, and there is only direct seeing. In another teaching, he expressed: > When the observer is the observed, there is no effort at all. This can help a seeker understand that transformation is not always about force, control, suppression, or struggle. Transformation begins when we see clearly what is happening within us, without escape and without judgment. For seekers of Vedanta, Krishnamurtis insights can beautifully complement the journey toward **Nididhyasana** not as another technique, but as a way of seeing oneself clearly in everyday life. His emphasis on awareness, attention, freedom from conditioning, and direct observation supports the movement from intellectual understanding to living awareness. Knowledge becomes transformation only when it becomes direct seeing.
Share This Article
Like This Article
© Gyanmarg 2024
V 1.2
Privacy Policy
Cookie Policy
Disclaimer
Terms & Conditions