Sometimes I would notice I was thinking about work problems,
while doing a household task, and silently reciting a song in my head, all at
the same time. It was just getting all together too busy in there.
I first turned towards the world’s great religious
traditions to seek the peace and compassion of the saints. I learned much, frequently
became inspired, and yet it did little to quiet my mind.
I studied myth. Again, learned much, got a sense of the
recurring themes in the life journey, but my mind was still noisy.
I started learning about meditation. It took a while to
really understand how simple it was, and that it was not about achieving some
amazing, transcending experience – even though I experienced a few remarkable
states. And whenever I meditated, it
certainly quieted things down for a bit. A 10 out of 10 stress day would be
reduced to 7 out of 10. A 5 out of 10 stress
day would be reduced to a 3. But as soon
as I stopped meditating the noise in my mind would begin to pick up again.
I got intrigued with yoga, thinking that maybe a movement
centered practice would be a better fit for someone like me who did not really
enjoy sitting still for too long. This
led to a pretty deep dive into yogic philosophy (some of the most comprehensive
to be found), years of practice, study with many prominent teachers, and
eventually a teacher training course and certification as a Registered Yoga
Teacher. Yoga helped my flexibility and strength and taught me a great deal
about the link between the body and the mind. However, it certainly did not deal
a knockout blow to the noise in my head. When I do yoga I am centered with a
quiet focused mind. When I stop, the mind slowly starts up again.
It was only when I almost gave up the search in frustration,
and actually prayed to find the right teacher, path or practice, to get me to
that more sustainably peaceful place that some deep part of me intuited
existed, did I finally connect with the teaching I had been looking for.
How ridiculous. It turned out the part of me that was so
intent on solving this problem, was the part of me that had no chance of
succeeding. That part of me, the thinking, planning, getting-better-at-it mind,
was indeed the main barrier to the deeper peace I was looking for. And all I had to do is stop identify with
it. That’s it. (It may sound too simple.
I know I would not have been satisfied with this answer if it was handed to me
before I had exhausted myself seeking some way to figure it out.)
My mind is still here. It is part of my experience. It does
useful things. It also continues to do
what human minds are wired to do; judge, resist, desire, fantasize, and
generally want things to be different.
The difference is I no longer plant my flag of identity
solely with my thoughts or emotions. I watch them come and go, and every hour there
is a new monologue. I just keep taking
my attention off them, and putting it on my breath, whatever else is present,
or the source of attention itself. Starved of attention and belief, the mind
usually quiets down. And sometimes it doesn’t.
It doesn’t matter, I simply choose to no longer mind the
mind.
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