Thinking is a wonderful tool. The ability to think has allowed us to develop
marvelous civilizations with great art and amazing technologies and material
comforts. But when we forget that it is just a tool, thinking can become a
real problem for us. We get caught up in stories that we tell ourselves. Stories
about who we are, how we aren't good enough and how we need more of this or
that to make us OK. Stories that reinforce our sense of dissatisfaction and
unease. Or we get caught in stories about why it is someone else's fault that
our lives are a particular way. Stories that reinforce our sense of separation,
alienation and victimization.
We often forget that concepts are simply tools, simply a short-hand, for
describing part of what we experience. We begin to believe that the concepts
really do describe reality and so we stop paying attention to the lives that
we are living moment to moment. We "know" what an "apple" is, so we don't
really notice this apple's shape, color, flavor, aroma and texture as we eat
it while doing something else. We are disconnected from our actual experience
and then don't understand why we feel that our lives aren't quite right.
An example of the difference between thinking, the conceptual layer of our
lives, and the reality can be found in an experience that is fairly common
for people who do sitting meditation. After sitting quietly, holding the
body in one position for a period of time, we begin to notice unpleasant
sensations in some part of the body, perhaps the knee. We tell ourselves
there is "pain" in the knee. It seems like a very solid thing, this pain,
and something that lasts for a very long time. We may become frightened
about it and start having thoughts about how our knee is going to be
permanently damaged and we will end up having to have knee surgery and
then we won't be able to run or play tennis or sit cross-legged for a
long time Š. But if we let go of the concept "pain" and look more closely
at the experience, we will see something very different. We will see that
what we call "pain," which seems so solid, is actually a quickly changing
series of sensations. There may be tightness, then sharpness, then an
unpleasant vibrating sensation. We will see that these sensations come
and go and maybe a similar sensation will arise a few moments later. We
recognize that pain is not solid and lasting but simply a changing series
of sensations quite different from the thought of "pain" even though both
are unpleasant. As we see more clearly the actual experience, it becomes
easier to be with it and there is less fear and contraction.
So we have this paradox that thinking is an essential tool but it is also
an impediment to experiencing our lives fully. The way through this paradox
is to recognize the experience of getting caught in thought and to learn
to relate to our thinking in a different way.
One of the first steps in recognizing that we are caught in thinking is
to understand the various forms that thought can take. We can experience
it as words, whole thoughts, judgments, images, numbers and imagined sounds
such as a song that repeatedly plays in our heads. The particular form that
it takes will depend on our conditioning the forms of thought that we are
most frequently exposed to. If we listen to a lot of music, when the mind
becomes quiet we may find that lots of songs arise into awareness. If we
write poetry, we may find that poems arise in the mind. It is simply
important to recognize that they are all forms of thought.
When insight meditation teachers talk about the process of confusing
thinking with reality, we often use a word that the Buddha used. We
speak in terms of clinging. I'm sure we've all had the experience of
taking laundry out of the dryer and finding it clinging together. As
we attempt to pull the clothes apart, it is as though there is a magnetic
force pulling the pieces of clothing together. In the same way, if we look
closely at our minds we can see that most of us have minds that are highly
conditioned to be attracted to thoughts, to cling to them. Another way of
talking about how we get caught in thought is in terms of identification.
Being identified with a thought means that we are caught up in it. We are
caught in the content of the thought. We are caught in believing that what
we are thinking is who we are. Or, we are caught in believing that what we
are thinking is who the person or thing we are thinking about is.
As we begin to recognize thoughts and that we are getting caught in
them through clinging or identification, then we need to learn how to
relate differently to our thoughts. The mind typically has a tendency
to respond with the idea that if thinking is a problem in meditation,
then the solution is to not think! If you've already been practicing
with mindfulness of breathing, you have probably noticed that no matter
how much effort you put into focusing on the sensations of breathing,
if the mind wants to think it will form thoughts. When we believe that
meditation means that we are not supposed to be thinking, this can be
very frustrating and can lead to a lot of judgment (more thoughts) that
we are not doing it right. Instead of trying to stop thinking, the
practice is to let go, to stop the clinging or identification by meeting
our thoughts with mindfulness.
We begin practicing mindfulness of thinking by making the intention to
recognize when we are caught in thoughts and to meet the thought with
mindfulness. This process of recognition often takes a while. We may
get caught in a thought and then have many more thoughts develop from
it before we recognize that we are caught. But that moment of recognition
is a moment of mindfulness. Each time we meet a thought with mindfulness,
we are strengthening the tendency for mindfulness to arise and weakening
the tendency to identify with thought. As we continue to practice and as
our concentration and mindfulness strengthen, we will often find that it
is easier to recognize that we are caught.
Sometimes after we recognize that we are caught there will be a judgment
that we haven't been practicing very well. It is important to recognize
that this is just another thought! Remember that mindfulness is attention
that is bare of judgment. It is also bare of decision-making and bare of
commentary or story-telling. When we meet thoughts with mindfulness, then
we are not manipulating our experience. It is not necessary to make an
effort to let go. When we meet thoughts with mindfulness, we are just
letting thoughts be thoughts without trying to make them last or to make
them go away. And when we do that, the thoughts will reveal their
impermanence to us. Often when we meet them with mindfulness they
will simply come and go on their own, or as the Tibetans say, they will
self-liberate. If the conditioning for the thought to arise is strong
enough, it may arise again. But this is simply a new thought to be greeted
with mindfulness as well.
Instructions for Practicing Mindfulness of Thinking
- Settle into your sitting position with an erect but relaxed posture.
- Take several deep breaths. Then allow your breath to flow in its normal, ever changing manner.
- With a quality of spacious awareness, rest your attention in the sensation of the breath flowing in and flowing out either at the tip/rims of your nostrils or in your chest or abdomen, wherever the sensations are most predominant.
- Allow the mind and body to become settled with some concentration.
- Then, when you become aware that your awareness has been pulled away from the breath or that you have become lost in thought, meet that thought with non-judgmental awareness until the thought disappears. Then return to the breath.
- If you are finding that it is very difficult to hold the thought in awareness, you might try gently labeling it as ³thinking ... thinking ... thinking² until the thought disappears. Labeling or noting can be a support for developing concentration and mindfulness. However, it can also become a habit that can interfere with your ability to be present. When able to hold a thought in awareness, see if you can drop the noting.
- As your ability to meet thoughts with mindfulness strengthens, notice the quality of impermanence, how the thoughts arise, are present and then pass away.
- After the thought passes away, return your attention to the sensations of breathing until another thought pulls your attention away.
- If you ever feel confused about what you are experiencing or what you should do, simply return your attention to the breath.
- Continue this practice until your meditation period is over.
- During the day, take a few moments to be mindful of your breath, body sensations, moods and thoughts. This is a good way of helping yourself to settle down into the present moment and to bring your meditation practice into your everyday life.
© Phil Jones, 2005