Source · The Book of Krishnamurti
#seeing
#transformation
#mind
💭 What does this mean to you?
Every soul reads the same words differently. Add your interpretation.
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The quote, 'To see is to transform,' on its surface, suggests that the act of observation itself brings about change. It implies that merely looking at something, or understanding it clearly, has the power to alter its nature or your relationship to it.
Krishnamurti, operating within a modern non-dual framework, points to a radical understanding of perception. For him, 'seeing' is not passive observation but an active, unmediated awareness, free from the conditioning of thought, memory, and the ego. This is not seeing *about* something, but seeing *what is*. In this state of pure awareness, the division between the seer and the seen collapses. The 'you' that is observing, with all its accumulated psychological baggage, ceases to be a separate entity. When the observer, the source of all psychological conflict and distortion, dissolves, what remains is a transformed reality. This is akin to the Buddhist concept of emptiness (sunyata), where phenomena are seen as lacking inherent, independent existence, or the Advaita Vedanta notion of realizing the non-duality of the Self (Atman) and the ultimate reality (Brahman). The transformation is not an external event but an internal dissolution of the self-imposed limitations of the mind.
In your life: When faced with a difficult emotion or situation, try to observe it without judgment or analysis, allowing yourself to simply *see* it as it is, without the interference of your usual mental reactions.