Still the Mind Quotes

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Still the Mind: An Introduction to Meditation Still the Mind: An Introduction to Meditation by Alan W. Watts
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“when somebody plays music, you listen. you just follow those sounds, and eventually you understand the music. the point can't be explained in words because music is not words, but after listening for a while, you understand the point of it, and that point is the music itself. in exactly the same way, you can listen to all experiences.”
Alan Wilson Watts, Still the Mind: An Introduction to Meditation
“People become concerned with being more humble than other people.”
Alan Watts, Still the Mind: An Introduction to Meditation
“You may think there’s no point in singing unless you are good at it, but that is like saying there is no point in doing anything at all unless you are particularly gifted at it, which is ridiculous.”
Alan W. Watts, Still the Mind: An Introduction to Meditation
“does the root of a flower influence the flower as something fundamentally different from it? No, surely the root and the flower are one process, and like your head and your feet it all goes together. In that sense then, the universe, and what you or I do, all goes together, and so that picture of the universe is really a picture of you.”
Alan W. Watts, Still the Mind: An Introduction to Meditation
“When you confer spiritual authority on another person, you must realize that you are allowing them to pick your pocket and sell you your own watch. How”
Alan W. Watts, Still the Mind: An Introduction to Meditation
“This tremendous whirling of energy is exactly one and the same energy that is looking out of your eyes, that is running along inside your brain, that is breathing, and that makes noises when you talk. The whole energy of the universe is coming at you and through you, and you are that energy.”
Alan W. Watts, Still the Mind: An Introduction to Meditation
“To some degree, all civilized people are out of touch with reality because we fail to distinguish between the way things are and the way they are described. For politicians this dichotomy has reached extreme proportions, but it affects everyone. We confuse money, which is an abstraction, with real wealth; we confuse the idea of who we are with the actual experience of our organic existence. During”
Alan W. Watts, Still the Mind: An Introduction to Meditation
“Therefore, if reason grows out of the primal energy that we are, then it means that the primal energy is at least reasonable, whatever else it may be. You can tell the tree by its fruits — for “by their fruits you shall know them” — and so it is that figs do not grow on thistles, or grapes on thorns, and a stupid universe does not create people. People are a manifestation of the potentiality in the energy of the universe, and if we are intelligent, then that which we express is also intelligent. By logical extension, that in which we express it is our central self. The world is not something external; it is what is most fundamentally you.”
Alan W. Watts, Still the Mind: An Introduction to Meditation