Understand: you cannot fix the past with your thoughts, and while you’re dwelling there your present is being left unattended. To be able to properly focus on now you need to be able to let go of yesterday.
Let us look at this act of letting-go. What is it exactly? What is the verb of letting something go? Because we don’t really let anything go. There’s not something within us that we have to exorcise. We don’t have to eject or expel our past. But we do have to stop engaging in the verb of recreating it in our present moments.
What this means is, you are blinded to the events happening around you while you invest your Now’s in re-creating the past within your interior, personal thoughts. As you think these thoughts you will be requesting chemistry from your brain. You will be asking for the chemicals for excitement, or sadness, or anger, or betrayal etc.
This chemistry and the feelings they create within you will have absolutely nothing to do with who or what you’re thinking about. It’s not the subject of your thoughts that counts. It’s the tone. So if you’re happy for someone else that’ll feel just like being happy for yourself. And if you’re angry at someone else then you’ll feel that anger as your own. The person you’re thinking about will be doing the exact same thing. They won’t feel your thoughts. They’ll feel their thoughts. And those probably don’t have anything to do with you.
Think of that water as your consciousness. And think of your actions within that water as your thoughts. You can either swim to the sides and look out with the equanimity of knowing that what’s outside the tank does not impact the inside of the tank, or you can look at the events outside the tank and you can react with some crappy thinking within the tank of your consciousness. Either way, it’s your water.
Stop messing up your own head with dirty thinking. Quiet your mind and enjoy the swim. Because in the end, that’s all there is. And if you look at it the right way, that is more than enough.
As you go through your day, ask yourself: what am I currently doing? Am I swimming, or am I filling my head with crap? Because every fish has to crap every now and then just to stay healthy. At the same time, there’s something not entirely healthy about crapping on the world all day long just by choice.
Choose your thoughts carefully. Do that simply because you’ve come to truly understand that your thoughts are where you actually experience your life.
peace. s
Scott McPherson is an Edmonton-based writer, public speaker, and mindfulness facilitator who works with individuals, companies and non-profit organisations locally and around the world.
I help people achieve better mental health by teaching them about reality.
