Hello, my first post here Thank you for having such a wonderful forum. Some questions I wanted to ask here, I learnt to meditate from Ajahn Brahms videos and just started meditating for the past 3 months and have been doing it everyday without fail. This is weird but I feel like I am having a hard time "letting go" in my recent meditation practice. To describe further and in short, its like a thought comes in, and after a while I will notice it, and then comes the thinking about thinking.
In my head, there will be thoughts like "oh man, you only noticed the thought after so long, that's not good" or "how long have I been following my previous thought? How can I be sure if I am doing this correctly?
In short, I'm thinking about thinking. And the more I have those thoughts, the more frustrated I get, and other random thoughts keep coming in. Is there any way I can clear these thoughts from me?
Thank you in advance
Thinking about thinking
Re: Thinking about thinking
Thinking about thinking is mental proliferation or papanca in Pali. Keep watching those thoughts and they will go away. That is their nature. If you feel frustrated, watch that feeling. It will also go away.
As AB would say - "You are not in control."
As AB would say - "You are not in control."
And what is right speech? Abstaining from lying, from divisive speech, from abusive speech, & from idle chatter: This is called right speech.
- Goofaholix
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Re: Thinking about thinking
The more you fight thoughts the more strength you give them, don't make a problem out of thoughts, it' the minds job to think.
You are doing glass half empty practice, instead do glass half full practice and give importance to noticing the times you are aware, notice the times you are not lost in thought, notice the gaps between thoughts, notice when the mind is relatively calm. Gradually over time you'll reinforce that these things are good and should be encouraged and that thoughts are not the enemy and you don't need to be bothered by them.
You are doing glass half empty practice, instead do glass half full practice and give importance to noticing the times you are aware, notice the times you are not lost in thought, notice the gaps between thoughts, notice when the mind is relatively calm. Gradually over time you'll reinforce that these things are good and should be encouraged and that thoughts are not the enemy and you don't need to be bothered by them.
Pronouns (no self / not self)
“Peace is within oneself to be found in the same place as agitation and suffering. It is not found in a forest or on a hilltop, nor is it given by a teacher. Where you experience suffering, you can also find freedom from suffering. Trying to run away from suffering is actually to run toward it.”
― Ajahn Chah
“Peace is within oneself to be found in the same place as agitation and suffering. It is not found in a forest or on a hilltop, nor is it given by a teacher. Where you experience suffering, you can also find freedom from suffering. Trying to run away from suffering is actually to run toward it.”
― Ajahn Chah
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Re: Thinking about thinking
Thank you so much, I was actually fighting the thoughts.Goofaholix wrote:The more you fight thoughts the more strength you give them, don't make a problem out of thoughts, it' the minds job to think.
You are doing glass half empty practice, instead do glass half full practice and give importance to noticing the times you are aware, notice the times you are not lost in thought, notice the gaps between thoughts, notice when the mind is relatively calm. Gradually over time you'll reinforce that these things are good and should be encouraged and that thoughts are not the enemy and you don't need to be bothered by them.
Now I understand.
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Re: Thinking about thinking
Thank you pegembara, didn't know why I was getting frustrated, I guess I was trying to be in control.pegembara wrote:Thinking about thinking is mental proliferation or papanca in Pali. Keep watching those thoughts and they will go away. That is their nature. If you feel frustrated, watch that feeling. It will also go away.
As AB would say - "You are not in control."
Will watch that feeling.
Re: Thinking about thinking
Great responses already.Richkierich wrote:...In my head, there will be thoughts like "oh man, you only noticed the thought after so long, that's not good"
I'll only add that my teacher describes the practice as working the muscle of returning to the present.
So, you can't practice (do repetitions with the muscle) unless you leave (lost in thought).
Distractions provide the opportunity to recognize distraction and to return to the meditation object -- a great thing!
Keep working that muscle!
Recognizing how you create your own suffering with your expectations and self-judgments is also very useful.
Getting to know suffering is critical task of first noble truth -- discomfort does not mean you are off track!
Best of luck!
Those who grasp at perceptions & views wander the internet creating friction. [based on Sn4:9,v.847]
Re: Thinking about thinking
You are in danger of falling into 'passive mindfulness', a widely recognised pitfall today for beginners, which ignores the function of Right Effort.
"...the path is not a truth available to passive observation. It's a truth of the will: something that can become true only if you want it to happen. By applying the desire of right effort, the element of skilful purpose, to the act of remaining focused, ardency enables sati to be established as right sati."[chap. 1]
In other words mindfulness is not right mindfulness unless it is harnessed to the tasks of right effort. Those tasks are the efforts to avoid, to overcome, to develop and to maintain.
Since you are focusing on the mind, these efforts refer to the:
" …categories (in Mental Qualities, the fourth in the Four Foundations of Mindfulness) of the five hindrances and the abandoning of unskillful mental qualities; the category of the seven factors for awakening makes reference to the act of bringing these skillful mental qualities to the culmination of their development, an achievement that can't be accomplished simply through passive observation." [chap.8]
“Many of the most tenacious causes require serious exertion and conscious fabrication”. (chap.4)
“Right Mindfulness”, Thanissaro Bikkhu.
"...the path is not a truth available to passive observation. It's a truth of the will: something that can become true only if you want it to happen. By applying the desire of right effort, the element of skilful purpose, to the act of remaining focused, ardency enables sati to be established as right sati."[chap. 1]
In other words mindfulness is not right mindfulness unless it is harnessed to the tasks of right effort. Those tasks are the efforts to avoid, to overcome, to develop and to maintain.
Since you are focusing on the mind, these efforts refer to the:
" …categories (in Mental Qualities, the fourth in the Four Foundations of Mindfulness) of the five hindrances and the abandoning of unskillful mental qualities; the category of the seven factors for awakening makes reference to the act of bringing these skillful mental qualities to the culmination of their development, an achievement that can't be accomplished simply through passive observation." [chap.8]
“Many of the most tenacious causes require serious exertion and conscious fabrication”. (chap.4)
“Right Mindfulness”, Thanissaro Bikkhu.
Last edited by paul on Mon May 16, 2016 11:59 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Thinking about thinking
"Whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things."
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Re: Thinking about thinking
Hmmm, hey you're right, I am actually noticing I'm going off track and then getting back to my sitting, maybe its not such a bad thing after all What about mental chatter? As in for example, when I know I am drifting with a thought and then I noticed it, and I tell myself "Oh, I'm thinking again, that's not my business", do I watch these thoughts too? Its like the thoughts that I am asking myself to let go.JohnK wrote:Great responses already.Richkierich wrote:...In my head, there will be thoughts like "oh man, you only noticed the thought after so long, that's not good"
I'll only add that my teacher describes the practice as working the muscle of returning to the present.
So, you can't practice (do repetitions with the muscle) unless you leave (lost in thought).
Distractions provide the opportunity to recognize distraction and to return to the meditation object -- a great thing!
Keep working that muscle!
Recognizing how you create your own suffering with your expectations and self-judgments is also very useful.
Getting to know suffering is critical task of first noble truth -- discomfort does not mean you are off track!
Best of luck!
I've practiced another round yesterday, and it does feel better after all your advises, thank you guys.
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Re: Thinking about thinking
Thanks Paul, this is deep, kinda having trouble understanding this, let me google right effort to find out more.paul wrote:You are in danger of falling into 'passive mindfulness', a widely recognised pitfall today for beginners, which ignores the function of Right Effort.
"...the path is not a truth available to passive observation. It's a truth of the will: something that can become true only if you want it to happen. By applying the desire of right effort, the element of skilful purpose, to the act of remaining focused, ardency enables sati to be established as right sati."[chap. 1]
In other words mindfulness is not right mindfulness unless it is harnessed to the tasks of right effort. Those tasks are the efforts to avoid, to overcome, to develop and to maintain.
Since you are focusing on the mind, these efforts refer to the:
" …categories (in Mental Qualities, the fourth in the Four Foundations of Mindfulness) of the five hindrances and the abandoning of unskillful mental qualities; the category of the seven factors for awakening makes reference to the act of bringing these skillful mental qualities to the culmination of their development, an achievement that can't be accomplished simply through passive observation." [chap.8]
“Many of the most tenacious causes require serious exertion and conscious fabrication”. (chap.4)
“Right Mindfulness”, Thanissaro Bikkhu.
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Re: Thinking about thinking
Thanks Paul, this is kinda deep for me too , I apologize. In this link, basically, we have to jump from themes to themes? and when thoughts arise still, we go into relaxing of thought-fabrication?Paul Davy wrote:Greetings,
This teaching from the Buddha seems applicable to your current situation.
Metta,
Paul.
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Re: Thinking about thinking
Greetings Richkierich,
No. It's a 5 step approach to removing unwholesome thoughts, where each step is a "stronger dosage" to the one prior... so you can scale up the response to whatever level you require depending on the magnitude of the symptoms.
Alternatively, there's the Buddha's process of dividing thoughts into two sorts, which may be helpful too.
As challenging as they may be to come to grips with initially, it is a blessing that we have the Buddha's discourses available to us to guide us safely to the good Dhamma.
Metta,
Paul.
No. It's a 5 step approach to removing unwholesome thoughts, where each step is a "stronger dosage" to the one prior... so you can scale up the response to whatever level you require depending on the magnitude of the symptoms.
Alternatively, there's the Buddha's process of dividing thoughts into two sorts, which may be helpful too.
As challenging as they may be to come to grips with initially, it is a blessing that we have the Buddha's discourses available to us to guide us safely to the good Dhamma.
Metta,
Paul.
"Whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things."
Re: Thinking about thinking
Hi Richkierich,
It may seem complex in a compressed form like that, but it's really only putting your practice into the perspective of the Noble Eightfold Path and is completely orthodox. If you could study the four functions of Right Effort . You're practising mindfulness, but you must yoke it to the tasks of Right Effort to activate the path. When you overcome the hindrances and cultivate the factors of enlightenment then that's an act of morality and sila is the basis of the path.
39. "Monks, I know not of any other single thing that brings such woe as the mind that is untamed, uncontrolled, unguarded and unrestrained. Such a mind indeed brings great woe.
40. "Monks, I know not of any other single thing that brings such bliss as the mind that is tamed, controlled, guarded and restrained. Such a mind indeed brings great bliss."
-AN 1.31-40
It may seem complex in a compressed form like that, but it's really only putting your practice into the perspective of the Noble Eightfold Path and is completely orthodox. If you could study the four functions of Right Effort . You're practising mindfulness, but you must yoke it to the tasks of Right Effort to activate the path. When you overcome the hindrances and cultivate the factors of enlightenment then that's an act of morality and sila is the basis of the path.
39. "Monks, I know not of any other single thing that brings such woe as the mind that is untamed, uncontrolled, unguarded and unrestrained. Such a mind indeed brings great woe.
40. "Monks, I know not of any other single thing that brings such bliss as the mind that is tamed, controlled, guarded and restrained. Such a mind indeed brings great bliss."
-AN 1.31-40
Re: Thinking about thinking
When I first began meditating, this is something I grappled with (and still do,occasionally)!
It's like a dog chasing it's own tail - you are thinking about thinking, as you said - and it gets you nowhere.
Treat the layer of thoughts that you have added on top of the initial thoughts just as you would any other distraction: simply observe and then return your attention back to the object of meditation.
Do not resist or push, but soften into it
Also, you seem to be very tough on yourself. What I have found to remedy this is forgiveness and metta. Forgiveness really is metta in a way, so repeat a wish of forgiveness to yourself (i.e. "I forgive myself for not being perfect.") and to the thoughts that have distracted you ("i forgive you for causing me pain").
As others have elucidated, the more you try to control, the bigger and more intense the thoughts get. Control really is aversion and aversion keeps you stuck.
It's like a dog chasing it's own tail - you are thinking about thinking, as you said - and it gets you nowhere.
Treat the layer of thoughts that you have added on top of the initial thoughts just as you would any other distraction: simply observe and then return your attention back to the object of meditation.
Do not resist or push, but soften into it
Also, you seem to be very tough on yourself. What I have found to remedy this is forgiveness and metta. Forgiveness really is metta in a way, so repeat a wish of forgiveness to yourself (i.e. "I forgive myself for not being perfect.") and to the thoughts that have distracted you ("i forgive you for causing me pain").
As others have elucidated, the more you try to control, the bigger and more intense the thoughts get. Control really is aversion and aversion keeps you stuck.
"A virtuous monk, Kotthita my friend, should attend in an appropriate way to the five clinging-aggregates as inconstant, stressful, a disease, a cancer, an arrow, painful, an affliction, alien, a dissolution, an emptiness, not-self."
http://vipassanameditation.asia
http://vipassanameditation.asia
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Re: Thinking about thinking
Gosh I appreciate all the help in here guys
I tried resisting the thoughts, controlling them and pushing them away and everything goes haywire, then, I began implementing the suggestions you guys mentioned, to observe and sort of watching and "being" with it and to "soften" it and it does really melts on its own. I mean the thoughts still come and go, its just that it doesn't spread like wildfire, it comes and dies off in a matter of seconds, milliseconds even.
So this is the letting go that AB mentioned, I felt this previously before, felt all the calmness and peace, maybe I was having some stressful days of late and got carried away again with my emotions, that explains that influx of thoughts and emotions lately. Will definitely practice this in my daily life.
Thank you so much guys
I tried resisting the thoughts, controlling them and pushing them away and everything goes haywire, then, I began implementing the suggestions you guys mentioned, to observe and sort of watching and "being" with it and to "soften" it and it does really melts on its own. I mean the thoughts still come and go, its just that it doesn't spread like wildfire, it comes and dies off in a matter of seconds, milliseconds even.
So this is the letting go that AB mentioned, I felt this previously before, felt all the calmness and peace, maybe I was having some stressful days of late and got carried away again with my emotions, that explains that influx of thoughts and emotions lately. Will definitely practice this in my daily life.
Thank you so much guys