
“No thought has any power. You have power. And when you identify and believe in the thought, you give power to the thought.” ~Mooji
It was 2004. I was on day three of a six-month meditation retreat, and my restless and turbulent mind was driving me nuts.
The prospect of sitting on this wretched cushion for another five minutes (let alone six months) was freaking me out.
“What on earth have I let myself in for? This is a crazy idea. I want to go home.”
My restless monkey mind was more like King Kong on amphetamines.
“No, remember how messed up you were before you arrived—and the crazy synchronicity that led you here,” a second, conciliatory voice chipped in.
Destiny had indeed dragged my ass across the world onto this bright red meditation cushion in mysterious ways.
Long story short, my housemate Jack had come to this meditation center after spraining his wrist and having to pull out of a yoga retreat he was supposed to attend in the US.
A few days later, he called me to say he loved it there and believed he’d found his teacher. He was really excited.
At the time, I was going through a particularly difficult period in my life. I had hit a brick wall and had no idea where to turn. So you can imagine my delight when I received a message from Jack, saying, “You’ll never guess what happened. I was talking to my teacher about you and he said, ‘Tell him to come to Canada as soon as he can and not to worry about the money. Just come.’”
Ten days later, I found myself perched on a bright red meditation cushion on a stunning property in the Canadian Rockies.
And this is where the real story begins.
As I sat on my cushion on day three, my restless mind was spinning out on overdrive. I needed help.
Unable to sit any longer, I stood up and approached the head monk:
“I’m really struggling here. I need to talk,” I said.
The conversation that ensued remains etched in my mind to this day. It went something like this:
“What’s the problem?” he asked with a look of compassion.
“I can’t stop thinking,” I replied.
“No, you can’t,” he smiled.
I was taken aback. It wasn’t the answer I was expecting.
“Nobody can. If you didn’t have a crazy, messed up mind, you wouldn’t be human.”
“But I’m going nuts. My mind is driving me crazy,” I pleaded.
“What the mind gets up to needn’t be any of your business,” he continued. “You are suffering because you’re open for business. You need to shut up shop. Just relax, be alert, and focus on your breath. Let the thoughts come and go without resistance. Leave the mind in peace to do its thing and it will leave you in peace to do yours. The mind can only trouble you if you entertain it.”
If You Didn’t Have A Crazy, Messed Up Mind, You Wouldn’t Be Human
Boy, that’s quite a statement!
We tend to see ourselves as special cases.
Nobody is quite as screwed up as I am, right?
If people only knew the nonsense that goes on inside my head, I’d have no friends at all, right?
Over the following six-month period, many of my long-held beliefs about the nature of the mind and the causes of suffering crumbled away.
When I showed up in Canada, I was riddled with self-judgment. I believed that finding peace (if it was even possible, which I doubted) would be a monumental task, requiring a complete overhaul of my broken mind.
Here are some of the key points I came to understand:
- Being messed up is an inevitable and unavoidable part of being human. Don’t beat yourself up over it.
- Peace of mind is an illusion because restlessness is the nature of mind. Disturbance and mind are one and the same thing.
- You don’t need to change or fix your thoughts in order to experience peace. You need to recognize the mind for what it is.
- There is no distance between you and peace. It is available to each of us in every moment… no matter what is going on in the mind.
Over time, I began to grasp and apply what my teacher meant by shutting up shop and minding your own business.
I learned that the key to experiencing ongoing contentment is to leave the mind in peace to do it’s crazy, messed up dance—in other words, to mind your own business.
“Allow thoughts to arise but don’t give them a place to land.” ~Papaji
Peace is the natural consequence of not minding what the mind gets up to.
Fast forward six months and I was a person transformed.
I was now finding my time on the cushion enjoyable and hugely rewarding. I was quite prone to experiencing blissful episodes… even with a chaotic mind. I had never known peace like this before.
I had also, much to my own surprise, taken my novice vows as a monk and received a new name. I wondered how that was going to go down with my family at home!
The following are seven key lessons I learned for dealing with an unruly mind to experience ongoing peace.
1. See the thoughts, don’t be the thoughts.
The first and most important step toward reclaiming your peace is to create some blue sky between you and the mind—to see your thoughts as objects rather than being enmeshed in them.
See the thoughts, don’t be the thoughts.
Thoughts are like clouds floating across the vast sky.
White clouds come and go. Dark clouds come and go. They are temporary and don’t affect the sky in any way. Every cloud is welcome. The sky has no preferences and remains untouched.
And it’s the same with the mind.
Thoughts constantly change but your awareness is like the sky— vast and unchanging.
Learning to step back and observe the passing thoughts with an attitude of dispassion and non-judgmental acceptance is the key to experiencing peace.
The thoughts are not the problem. The real issue is your identification with them. Recognizing this can transform your life in an instant.
2. Know there is nothing wrong with you.
This was a big one for me.
An ‘unholy’ thought appears in your head—a judgmental thought, a resentful thought, or a jealous thought—and you beat yourself up for having it.
You believe that you shouldn’t be having thoughts like these—that there is something wrong with you.
Well, there is nothing wrong. Everybody, without exception, has these kinds of thoughts. It’s called being human.
The mind is part of the human apparatus, just like arms or eyes.
It is very much like a computer. Your cultural conditioning, your DNA, and your unique set of life experiences determine the thoughts it churns out.
Given your background and history, your mind could not be producing thoughts other than the ones it’s producing.
Your thoughts are not personal. They are part of your programming, part of the human condition.
3. Roll out the red carpet.
When thoughts you label “good” enter your awareness, they meet with no resistance. You are quite happy for them to hang around.
When you label a thought as “bad” or “undesirable,” you reject it. It’s unwelcome.
It is this tendency to judge unwanted thoughts as bad or wrong that creates suffering.
Thoughts are not inherently good or bad. You make them so through your labeling. They are neutral events passing through your awareness and left alone, have no power to make you suffer.
Let them come and go. Remain as the observer. Don’t give them a place to land.
Roll out the red carpet for all thoughts—the good, the bad, and the ugly.
Treat all thoughts as honored guests and watch your peace and happiness blossom.
4. The mind is a bigger liar than Pinocchio.
“I discovered that when I believed my thoughts, I suffered, but that when I didn’t believe them, I didn’t suffer, and that this is true for every human being. Freedom is as simple as that. I found that suffering is optional.” ~Byron Katie
Take everything the mind tells you with a large pinch of salt.
Question, in particular, your beliefs and assumptions.
Every day, we unconsciously make so many assumptions.
If you dislike your job, for example, you probably make the assumption, before you even leave the house in the morning, that your day won’t be enjoyable.
Be innocent. Be prepared for surprises.
Ask yourself the question: “Do I know for certain that this belief, this assumption, is true?”
Can you find evidence to support the opposite?
You may well find that it is surprisingly easy to disprove some of your long-held beliefs.
5. Don’t allow thoughts to turn into thinking.
Thoughts are self-arising. They appear by themselves from nowhere. There is nothing you can do to stop them from appearing. It is simply the mind doing what it does.
Thinking, on the other hand, is a choice.
A thought such as: “She hasn’t called for two hours” triggers a stream of thoughts:
“Did I say something wrong? Maybe she’s having second thoughts? She probably finds me unattractive. She looks like she works out a lot. Maybe she thinks I’m not good enough for her.”
This is thinking (and it is also based on unfound beliefs).
The original thought arrived by itself. You didn’t choose it. The resulting stream of thoughts, on the other hand, is something you can choose to indulge in or not.
Thinking is a choice. The more you become aware of your tendency to do this, the easier it becomes to stop yourself mid- sentence.
Most of our thinking is unconscious. We create so much unnecessary suffering for ourselves through a simple lack of awareness.
6. Know you are not your thoughts.
Think of it logically. Anything you can objectify cannot be who you are.
I (the subject) am aware of the book (the object) lying on the table. Therefore, I can’t be the book.
You can apply the exact same logic to thoughts, feelings, emotions, or the mind. Anything I can observe, I can’t be.
Anything I call “my”—my thoughts, my feelings, my emotions—cannot be me.
When you believe you are your thoughts, it is natural that you will judge them as “bad” or “wrong” and judge yourself for having them.
Another metaphor used in meditation is the analogy of the screen and the movie. If there is a fire in the movie, the screen doesn’t get burned.
The awareness that you are remains untouched by anything you are aware of. Your thoughts are not you. They are events passing across the screen of your awareness. Who you are doesn’t change.
The awareness that you are doesn’t know happiness or unhappiness. It is only aware. It is always at peace.
7. Withdraw your attention from the mind.
When I first ‘got’ these simple truths, I had a massive Homer Simpson “DUH” moment.
Why doesn’t everyone see this? It’s so obvious.
And yet, without having had it pointed out to me, I would never have seen that engaging with the mind is optional, not obligatory.
Having better understood the nature of the mind and the difference between thoughts and thinking, I now give it far less importance than I used to.
I am much happier as a result, regardless of what kind of thoughts appear.
Fear thoughts, doubt thoughts, and anger thoughts continue to arise as before. Now I know it’s simply the conditioned mind doing its thing. There is nothing wrong with any of it. I only suffer when I unconsciously resist or judge.
Happiness is not about the absence of unhappy thoughts, feelings, and emotions. It comes from understanding that I am not defined by any of these. They are free to come and go as they please.
The mind has as much or as little power over you as you give it.
The mind is not your enemy. It is your most valuable ally—an incredible servant that is always there for you to use as you choose.
“Mind: a beautiful servant or a dangerous master.” ~Osho
About Richard Paterson
Richard is a former monk, spiritual coach, and author. His blog, Think Less and Grow Rich, is dedicated to helping people quickly break free from the clutches of an overactive mind to experience more peace, joy, and inner freedom. Grab a free copy of his popular book Kick the Thinking Habit here. Or check out his new membership site Quiet Mind Peaceful Life Inner Circle.
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Though I run this site, it is not mine. It's ours. It's not about me. It's about us. Your stories and your wisdom are just as meaningful as mine.
I have heard ‘you are not your thoughts’ many times. However, your analogy of the clouds and the sky and the screen and the fire made me see things so much more clearly. Many many thanks.
Thank you for this article! I needed this right now in my life!
Very insightful post. Wonderful tips to help ease a busy mind and overthinking. Thank you!
Excellent article. Thank you
Really well written and clear. All new meditation students should have to read this so they don’t think they are doing something ‘wrong’ when the mind keeps generating wild thoughts.
Richard, what if you have distorted thinking due to a diagnosed mental illness. My mind tells me that I am crazy and to hide my thoughts from everyone so they won’t get disturbed by me. How can I deal with the labels on me and even how I think about myself as an inferior human being because of this illness?
Yes Siane, The screen and the movie is a good analogy. We get so caught up in the movie that we don’t notice the screen. When the movie finishes, you see the screen again. It was there the whole time but you were distracted by the flickering images.
It is same with the mind. The key to peace is to give more attention to the part of you that is aware of thoughts than you do to the thoughts themselves.
Thank you Kiwi. I’m glad it was helpful.
I hear you Amy.
Thanks a lot. Happy you enjoyed it!
Thanks Beanne. I’m happy you liked it.
Hi Carl, Yes. That’s exactly what the mind does. It is essentially a computer that spits out what has been programmed into it. Like arms and ears, it is part of the apparatus that we need to live in the world. We get into trouble when we take it to be (the totality of) who we are. There is no such thing as a ‘wrong’ thought.
Very spot on! I was pleasantly surprised to see you quote Papagi. His student (Gangagi) is my teacher. So much of what she teaches was echoed in this article. “To hold on to any thought or moment creates unnecessary suffering.” Also, “who you think you are does not exist. Who you actually are is alway present in all situations.” I remember hearing a news program about people who have strange thoughts pop into their heads. Example, a mother was horrified that while giving her baby a bath, a thought of holding the baby underwater flashed through her mind even though the two of them were having a wonderful time. I feel for most people myself included, their minds are like computers that have been infected with bloatware and lot of unnecessary baggage weighs them down as for as their cognitive abilities go.
How can anything I call MY emotions, MY feelings, not be mine when it is coming from within ME?
The awareness that you are doesn’t know happiness or unhappiness? The awareness that I am, is suffering an incurable disease, does know unhappiness! Please explain further
I love Gangaji, Gomek. I used to listen to her a lot. I have been going to Ramana Maharshi’s ashram in Tiruvannamalai for over 25 years and find Advaita very inspiring! Have you had those kind of thoughts yourself… the ones where you irrationally want to harm people? I have. I think they are quite common and just part of the workings of the bizarre thought machine that the mind is. It’s nothing to be concerned about.
No, I wasn’t inferring those traits to myself, just a psychological reference.
If your mind tells you that you are crazy and you are aware of it then you are not crazy.
Hi there,
I’m really sorry to hear about your situation. This is an incredibly tricky and delicate subject. I am not for one moment suggesting that your suffering is not real. On the level of the mind and the physical body, suffering is very much real.
What i am suggesting is that the mind and the physical body do not comprise the entirety of who we are. Yes, we are the mind and body BUT we are also much, much greater than that as well. What I am suggesting (and this is also the teachings of many masters I have followed) is that mind and body exist within a field of awareness that is beyond polarities such as happiness and unhappiness.
Another way to explain this would be to say that when you have a happy thought you are aware of that thought. Similarly, when you have an unhappy thought, you are aware of that too. It is same awareness that is aware of both thoughts and this awareness remains unaffected by the thoughts it is aware of.
It is our identification with the mind (rather than the awareness that is aware of the mind) that is the basic cause of suffering…. and the path to freedom.
I fully appreciate that an intellectual explanation is of little help to you. I haven’t experienced what you have and who knows? Maybe I would experience things very differently if I had?
Wishing you all the best, Richard
Richards, I agree “thoughts are thoughts” but not all thoughts carry equal weight and can be dismissed with simple recognition right? PTSD memories, traumas major and minor, seem to differ from some thoughts more easily dismissed through recognition “I wish I wasn’t going bald.” How does one deal with thoughts that are very powerful?
Hi Philip, Good question Philip. I agree with you totally that some thoughts SEEM to carry more weight than others. My teacher used to call these ‘special thoughts’.
If you were to close your eyes for one minute and count all the thoughts that appear, I guarantee you would only count about half of them. The other half you would take to be “me” and not count.
There are many thoughts we are so identified with that we are unable to separate ourselves from them… ie unable to view them objectively as “not me.” — for example PTSD memories, traumas etc. Ultimately, all thoughts are “not me” but you’d need to be pretty spiritually evolved to experience all thoughts objectively.
Thank you for the inspiring article.
Absolutely LOVE this!!
Richard you are a lovely human being your article is fabulous.
JUST LOVE THIS ARTICLE, CAME FOR THE REFERENCE FOR MY BLOG BUT THIS IS WAY BEYOND, MORE LIKE A RESEACH PAPER!
GOD BLESS!!!