33.
ON SUPERFICIALITY
Question:
How
is one who is superficial to become serious?
Krishnamurti:
First
of all, we must be aware that we are superficial, must we not? What does it mean
to be superficial? Essentially, to be dependent, does it not? To depend on
stimulation, to depend on challenge, to depend on another, to depend
psychologically on certain values, certain experiences, certain memories—does
not all that make for superficiality? When I depend on going to church every
morning or every week in order to be uplifted, in order to be helped, does that
not make me superficial? If I have to perform certain rituals to maintain my
sense of integrity or to regain a feeling which I may once have had, does that
not make me superficial? Does it not make me superficial when I give myself over
to a country, to a plan or to a particular political group? Surely this whole
process of dependence is an evasion of myself; this identification with the
greater is the denial of what I am. But I cannot deny what I am; I must
understand what I am and not try to identify myself with the universe, with God,
with a particular political party or what you will. All this leads to shallow
thinking and from shallow thinking there is activity which is everlastingly
mischievous, whether on a worldwide scale, or on the individual scale.
First
of all, do we recognize that we are doing these things? We do not; we justify
them. We say, “What shall I do if I don’t do these things? I’ll be worse
off; my mind will go to pieces. Now, at least, I am struggling towards something
better.” The more we struggle the more superficial we are. I have to see that
first, have I not? That is one of the most difficult things; to see what I am,
to acknowledge that I am stupid, that I am shallow, that I am narrow, that I am
jealous. If I see what I am, if I recognize it, then with that I can start.
Surely, a shallow mind is a mind that escapes from what is; not to escape
requires arduous investigation, the denial of inertia. The moment I know I am
shallow, there is already a process of deepening—if I don’t do anything
about the shallowness. If the mind says, “I am petty, and I am going to go
into it, I am going to understand the whole of this pettiness, this narrowing
influence”, then there is a possibility of transformation; but a petty mind,
acknowledging that it is petty and trying to be non-petty by reading, by meeting
people, by travelling, by being incessantly active like a monkey, is still a
petty mind.
Again,
you see, there is a real revolution only if we approach this problem rightly.
The right approach to the problem gives an extraordinary confidence which I
assure you moves mountains—the mountains of one’s own prejudices,
conditionings. Being aware of a shallow mind, do not try to become deep. A
shallow mind can never know great depths. It can have plenty of knowledge,
information, it can repeat words—you know the whole paraphernalia of a
superficial mind that is active. But if you know that you are superficial,
shallow, if you are aware of the shallowness and observe all its activities
without judging, without condemnation, then you will soon see that the shallow
thing has disappeared entirely, without your action upon it. That requires
patience, watchfulness, not an eager desire for a result, for achievement. It is
only a shallow mind that wants an achievement, a result.
The
more you are aware of this whole process, the more you will discover the
activities of the mind but you must observe them without trying to put an end to
them, because the moment you seek an end, you are again caught in the duality of
the ‘me’ and the ‘not-me’—which continues the problem.
***
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