For Those Seeking an Inner Revolution - A Path to Observing and Dissolving the Ego A clear and experiential introduction to the philosophy of Jiddu Krishnamurti, exploring the nature of the ego through direct observation in everyday life. In a world saturated with digital overload, social fragmentation, and the invisible pressure to become someone, this book examines the conditioned ego shaped by such forces-and explores freedom from it. Inspired by The First and Last Freedom by J. Krishnamurti, Takeshi Nachi approaches ego and awareness from a contemporary, experience-based perspective. After seven years of sustained observation of the ego as it is, a decisive shift occurred: the "I" was perceived like a small stone by the roadside, and perception moved from the personal self to the world itself. From this shift, the book rearticulates Krishnamurti's distinctive expressions-such as "the observer is the observed," "the thinker is the thought," and the "creative state"-in clear and accessible language. From the TextThe Wisdom of Zen and "What Is" There is a Zen saying: "Willows are green, flowers are red." This simply means that willows are green and flowers are red-nothing other than what they are. It points to the truth that reality is only what is, and nothing more. Another famous phrase by Dōgen reads: "The eyes are horizontal, the nose is vertical." This merely states that eyes are placed sideways and the nose vertically-nothing beyond that. This is the same meaning as what Krishnamurti expressed when he said, "The observer is the observed." There is only what is. Nothing extra exists. Nothing needs to be added. Nothing needs to be decorated. Everything is complete and sufficient as it is. Since there is only the phenomenon of what is, in truth, the very functioning of what is itself is the mystery. About the Author Takeshi Nachi is a Japanese author and founder of the Non-Ego Expression Research Group (MUGA), a community devoted to exploring expression grounded not in the individual "I," but in the world as non-ego. In his mid-twenties, he encountered the teachings of J. Krishnamurti, which shaped his lifelong inquiry into consciousness and the nature of the self. He spent seven years in sustained meditation centered on the direct observation of the ego, undergoing a profound shift from a self-centered mode of perception to a world-centered awareness-an experience that continues to inform his philosophy of expression. He is the author of several books published in Japan examining psychological freedom and the transformation of expression beyond ego-centered consciousness.
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