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Thought is your Enemy Conversations with U.G. Krishnamurti

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This is another book exploring the mind of U.G.

123 pages, Paperback

First published December 12, 2007

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367 people want to read

About the author

U.G. Krishnamurti

66 books135 followers
Uppaluri Gopala Krishnamurti also known as U.G. Krishnamurti, was an Indian thinker who said that there is no "enlightenment". Although necessary for day to day functioning of the individual, in terms of the Ultimate Reality or Truth he rejected the very basis of thought and in doing so negated all systems of thought and knowledge in reference to It.

U.G was born on July 9, 1918 in Machilipatnam, a town in coastal Andhra Pradesh, India, and raised in the nearby town of Gudivada. His mother died seven days after he was born, and he was brought up by his maternal grandfather, a wealthy Brahmin lawyer, who was also involved in the Theosophical Society. U.G. also became a member of the Theosophical Society during his teenage years.

During the same period of his life, U.G. reportedly practiced all kinds of austerities and apparently sought moksha or spiritual enlightenment. To that end, between the ages of fourteen and twenty-one, he undertook all kinds of spiritual exercise, determined to find out whether moksha was possible. Wanting to achieve that state, he had also resolved to prove that if there were people who have thus "realized" themselves, they could not be hypocritical.As part of this endeavor, he searched for a person who was an embodiment of such "realization".


U.G. emphasized the impossibility and non-necessity of any human change, radical or mundane. These assertions, he stated, cannot be considered as a "teaching", that is, something intended to be used to bring about a change. He insisted that the body and its actions are already perfect, and he considered attempts to change or mold the body as violations of the peace and the harmony that is already there. The psyche or self or mind, an entity which he denied as having any being, is composed of nothing but the "demand" to bring about change in the world, in itself, or in both. Furthermore, human self-consciousness is not a thing, but a movement, one characterized by "perpetual malcontent" and a "fascist insistence" on its own importance and survival.
U.G. denied the existence of an individual mind. However, he accepted the concept of a world mind, which according to him contained the accumulation of the totality of man's knowledge and experience. He also used 'thought sphere'(atmosphere of thoughts) synonymously with the term 'world mind'. He stated that human beings inhabit this thought realm or thought sphere and that the human brain acts like an antenna, picking and choosing thoughts according to its needs. U.G. held all human experience to be the result of this process of thought. The self-consciousness or 'I' in human beings is born out the need to give oneself continuity through the constant utilization of thought. When this continuity is broken, even for a split second, its hold on the body is broken and the body falls into its natural rhythm. Thought also falls into its natural place – then it can no longer interfere or influence the working of the human body. In the absence of any continuity the arising thoughts combust.He stated that we inhabit a thought realm. When the continuity of thought is broken, even for a split second, its hold on the body is broken and the body falls into its natural rhythm. Thought also falls into its natural place – then it can no longer interfere or influence the working of the human body. In the absence of any continuity the arising thoughts combust.
In its natural state, the senses of the body take on independent existences (uncoordinated by any 'inner self') and the ductless glands (that correspond to the locations of the Hindu chakras) become reactivated. UG described how it is the pineal gland (Ajna Chakra) that takes over the functioning of the body in the natural state, as opposed to thought.
U.G. also maintained that the reason people came to him (and to gurus), was in order to find solutions for their everyday real problems, and/or for solutions to a fabricated problem, namely, the search for spirituality

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
14 reviews1 follower
August 30, 2018
UG makes some very strong,compelling arguments. Our thoughts are an extension of memory which in turn is the culmination of physical perceptions. Man is just another species who is here to just live and die like animals. There is nothing esoteric about our existence. Something that I would like to deeply accept within my life.
22 reviews2 followers
June 15, 2020
U.G. is my esoteric daddi. Truly iconoclastic in the deepest sense, U.G.'s life work was dispelling illusions and Real Talking the eastern esoteric community. As you can imagine, eastern thinkers can get up their own asses pretty hardcore. This is especially true of us westerners who find wisdom in ancient practices. For everyone flowery and happy "everything is ok" style text of eastern philosophy out there, U.G. has ten-thousand firebolts ready at hand. God I love him.

"As far as the eye is concerned, there are no two things there."
1 review1 follower
September 6, 2020
Another Expression of the Enlightened State

This book goes against a lot of what is accepted in spiritual circles. U. G stands apart from the establishment, both religious and political.
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10 reviews
May 3, 2017
This book made lot of sense to me in my understanding of spirituality by simply stating that it doesn't exists and there is nothing to be achieved in the path to spirituality. As this book drew up parallels with theory of evolution regarding human condition, although not by directly drawing inferences from it, it stands convincing to people who can't swallow the idea of soul being the chief source to all of human conditioning. It gave me some piece of mind.
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