Thought is the result of the past acting in the present; the past is constantly sweeping over the present. The present, the new, is ever being absorbed by the past, by the known. To live in the eternal present there must be death to the past, to memory; in this death there is timeless renewal.
The present extends into the past and into the future; without the understanding of the present the door to the past is closed. The perception of the new is so fleeting; no sooner is it felt than the swift current of the past sweeps over it and the new ceases to be. To die to the many yesterdays, to renew each day is only possible if we are capable of being passively aware. In this passive awareness there is no gathering to oneself; in it there is intense stillness in which the new is ever unfolding, in which silence is ever extending with measure.Jiddu Krishnamurti, Transcript of Talk 10, Ojai, 29 July 1945
To remain still, to turn from knowing to simple awareness – without choosing, without direction, in open unknowing – really, that is all that is needed. It is so simple, so unproblematic, that we find it the most difficult thing, simply because it seems too good to be true. And yet it is the truest encounter this life affords; it is the open door to “the original primordially empty Body of Reality, the ultimate truth of the expanse” (Longchenpa). In the end, there is nothing else.

Pingback: The open door | Silent Assemblies
Thanks, Mike. Here is a nice description of what I think you are describing above by the Chinese poet ‘Cold Mountain’. Very simply expressed, but evocative.
‘My mind like the autumn moon’s reflection
In a jade green pool – clear, bright and pure.
Nothing can compare to this.
What would you have me say?’
LikeLike
Yes, Tom, absolutely! That little poem is perfect – he nailed it. I love Snyder’s translations, which I first read years ago. I should reread them.
LikeLike
Yes, Gary Snyder was the pioneer in the translation of the Cold Mountain poems, and still one of the best…
LikeLiked by 1 person