
What are you doing with your life? Can anyone show you the way, or must you be a light to yourself? Do we see the urgency of change? One of the greatest spiritual teachers and philosophers of all time, J. Krishnamurti challenges us to question all that we know and discover our true nature in the here and now. This official podcast from Krishnamurti Foundation Trust now has over 250 episodes. Episodes 1-50 feature conversations between Krishnamurti and luminaries from many paths, along with readings of the classic book Commentaries on Living by actor Terence Stamp. Episode 51 onwards features carefully chosen extracts based on a theme explored by Krishnamurti. The extracts from our archives have been carefully selected to represent his different approaches to each of these universal and timelessly relevant themes. Get in touch at podcast@kfoundation.org. Please consider leaving a review, which helps the visibility of the podcast.
Episodes

Wednesday Jun 17, 2020
Conversation with Alain Naudé 6 – A mind that is not empty cannot find truth
Wednesday Jun 17, 2020
Wednesday Jun 17, 2020
This conversation between Krishnamurti and Naude was recorded in Malibu in 1972. Naude begins by asking: Are the various scriptures of India and the Middle East similar to or in contradiction to your teaching?
Krishnamurti later asks: Can thought end right through one’s consciousness? Must thought not end for something new to be observed?
How does the mind look at itself? Does it look as an observer different from the observed, or without the observer and therefore there is only the observed?
Can consciousness empty itself of its content?
What has happened to the mind that has discarded the weight of becoming, of tradition, myth, gurus and authority?
A mind that has no space can never find truth. A mind that is not empty can never find truth.
Remaining with the fact of hurt.
When you are nothing, you love.
There is a movement in silence that has no beginning and no end, a movement that is always new.
Inquiry is different from effort, from seeking, from achievement.
Alain Naude was Krishnamurti’s private secretary in the 1960s. He met Krishnamurti in 1963 whilst a music lecturer and concert pianist. He gave up his teaching and performing in 1964 to work with Krishnamurti. Fluent in several languages, he was very helpful at international gatherings and in attracting younger audiences to Krishnamurti’s talks, at a time of cultural change in the West.
Find us online at kfoundation.org and on social media as Krishnamurti Foundation Trust
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