If the young have not that revolutionary discontent, they are already old
Jiddu Krishnamurti
As I was saying if the young have not that revolutionary discontent,
they are already old; and the old are those who were once discontented,
but have settled back. They want security, they want permanency, either
in their jobs or in their souls. They want certainty in ideas, in relationship,
or in property. If in you, who are young, there is a spirit of inquiry which
makes you want the truth of anything, of any political action whether of
the left or of the right, and if you are not bound by tradition, then you
will be the regenerators of the world, the creators of a new civilization,
a new culture. But, like the rest of us, like the past generation, young
people also want security, certainty. They want jobs, they want food, clothing
and shelter, they don't want to disagree with their parents because it means
going against society. Therefore, they fall in line, they accept the authority
of older people. So, what happens? The discontent which is the very flame
of inquiry, of search, of understanding – that discontent is made mediocre,
it becomes merely a desire for a better job, or a rich marriage, or a degree.
So, their discontent is destroyed, it merely becomes the desire for more
security. Surely, what is essential for the old and for the young is to live
fully, completely. But you see, there are very few people who want to live
completely. To live fully and completely, there must be freedom, not an acceptance
of authority; and there can be freedom only when there is virtue. Virtue
is not imitation; virtue is creative living. That is, creativeness comes
through the freedom which virtue brings; and virtue is not to be cultivated,
it does not come through practice or at the end of your life. Either you
are virtuous and free now, or you are not. And to find out why you are not
free, you must have discontent, you must have the intention, the drive, the
energy to encore; but you dissipate that energy sexually, or through shouting
political slogans, waving flags, or merely imitating, passing examinations
for a better job.
1948 4th Public Talk, Bangalore, India, p. 34 - 35
The Collected Works of J. Krishnamurti, Vol. V.