"I am not my thoughts,
emotions, sense perceptions, and experiences.” Eckhart Tolle
Am I who I think I am?
There are so many
thoughts going on in our mind all the time. We live in a constant stream of
automatic, associative thoughts just like fish in living in water. Sometimes we
find ourselves caught up in thinking about the past, fearing the future,
comparing ourselves to others and being critical of others and ourselves. In
fact, 47% of our waking life is spent thinking about what is not actually happening
at the present moment.
Our thoughts as seen
to be ‘truths’ as to who we are and what will/ did happen. Thoughts can
overwhelm us, confuse, frustrate and sadden us. We might wish there was a
switch to turn “the noise machine in the head” OFF so to have some peace!
“The primary cause of
unhappiness is never the situation but your thoughts about it.” Eckhart
Tolle
What to do with our thoughts?
Through the practice
of mindfulness meditation, we can learn to recognise our thoughts without
becoming lost in their content. This gives us the capacity to later choose what
thoughts to engage with, and to have increasing access to present moment
experience. Having an ability to choose is precious. Some thoughts are useful
but many are repetitive and can stir up fear. When our thoughts are compelling,
we can go into a trance and forget they are just thoughts and we start to take
them as being reality.
In mindfulness
practice we learn to simply recognise that thinking is going on and then we
relax, open, reconnect with our senses—relaxing back into awareness of our
body, of our breath or chosen anchor. With practice over time, our lives become
guided by the wisdom that “I am not my thoughts; I don’t have to believe my
thoughts.”
Use of lovingkindness and forgiveness mindfulness practices
By bringing a gentle
allowing attention to the present moment, we are cultivating the respect and
appreciation of lovingkindness. When we bring mindful presence to physical or
emotional difficulty, our heart opens in compassion. Taking some time to
practice the lovingkindness, forgiveness, and compassion meditations can be
very helpful.
“ How you respond to
the issue is the issue.” Frankie Perez
I invite you to give
yourself the gift of listening to this guided lovingkindness meditation lead by
Tara Brach.
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