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Chapter on 7

Don't Believe Everything You Think

IF THINKING IS THE ROOT CAUSE OF OUR SUFFERING, HOW DO WE STOP THINKING?

“A crowded mind leaves no space for a peaceful

heart.”

 

 

Heaven and Hell: A Zen Parable

A tough, brawny samurai once approached a Zen master who was deep in meditation. Impatient and discourteous, the samurai demanded in his husky voice so accustomed to forceful yelling, “Tell me the nature of heaven and hell.”

The Zen master opened his eyes, looked the samurai in the face, and replied with a certain scorn, “Why should I answer to a shabby, disgusting, despondent slob like you? A worm like you, do you think I should tell you anything? I can’t stand you. Get out of my sight. I have no time for silly questions.”

The samurai could not bear these insults. Consumed by rage, he drew his sword and raised it to sever the master’s head at

once.

Looking straight into the samurai’s eyes, the Zen master tenderly declared, “That’s hell.”

The samurai froze. He immediately understood that anger had him in its grip. His mind had just created his own hell — one filled with resentment, hatred, self-defense, and fury. He realized that he was so deep in his torment that he was ready to kill somebody.

The samurai’s eyes filled with tears. Setting his sword aside, he put his palms together and obsequiously bowed in gratitude for this insight.

The Zen master gently acknowledged with a delicate smile, “And that’s heaven.”

It’s not possible to just entirely stop thinking, but what we can do is reduce the time we spend thinking so that it gets smaller and smaller each day that passes. Eventually we can get to the point where we spend most of our day not caught up in our thinking and live in a blissful state most of the time.

When we say that we want to stop thinking, many people assume that we are trying to stop all thoughts in general. This isn’t what we’re trying to do. Now that you know the di9erence between thoughts and thinking, we are working on allowing thoughts to come and flow through us while we minimize the thinking about those thoughts that emerge.

The most interesting and almost paradoxical thing about stopping our thinking is that we don’t have to do anything to minimize it other than to be aware of it. By us becoming aware that we are thinking and that it is the root cause of all our su9ering, it automatically makes us conscious to that fact and

we become detached to it, allowing it to settle and pass. This takes almost no e9ort and is done through pure presence in the moment.

Here’s an analogy from one of my mentors that illustrates this concept:

Imagine I give you a bowl of cloudy, dirty, murky water. If I asked you, how you would make the water clear, how would you do it?

Take 15 seconds to see what answers you come up with before moving on.

Most people say something along the lines of filtering the water or even boiling it. What most people don’t realize is that if we let the bowl of dirty water sit for a period of time, we can see that the dirt begins to settle on its own in the water and after a while, the water becomes clear on its own.

This is how our minds also work. If we let our thinking sit without disturbing it by trying to “filter” or “boil” it, the thinking will settle down on its own and our minds will become free from thinking. The natural state of water is clear, and the natural state of our minds is also clear, if we do not disturb it.

If life begins to feel unclear, disorganized, stressful and you’re not sure what to do next, you now know that it’s only because your thinking is stirring up the dirt, making your mind cloudy and difficult to

see ahead. You can use this as an indicator to help you realize that you’re thinking way too much.

Once we become aware of the fact that we are only feeling what we’re thinking and that thinking is the root cause of our unpleasant experience, we see it for what it truly is. Then we

allow it to settle by giving it space, and slowly we will see how we begin to have a clear mind again.

You can think of your mind like quicksand: the more you struggle with your thoughts, the deeper you sink into negative emotions. In quicksand, fighting it only pulls you under faster, tightening its hold. But if you stop resisting and allow your body’s natural buoyancy to work, you’ll rise to the surface with ease. In the same way, breaking free from your thoughts involves letting go and trusting your inner wisdom to guide you back to clarity and peace, as it always has.

It’s completely normal to move between thinking and non-thinking states. Trying to remain in a constant state of mental stillness is impossible, and forcing it only leads to frustration, pulling you back into the very thoughts you’re trying to escape.

As spiritual beings having a physical experience, we naturally flow between feelings of anxiety or stress and moments of joy and peace. While we can’t control or stop these shifts, we can spend less time in overthinking and create more opportunities to feel peaceful, passionate, and full of love.

Though it might feel like you’re doomed to get stuck in your thoughts, it’s not something to fear. You can always return to your natural state of peace and clarity.

state of nonthinking. It is just a part of our beautiful human experience.

What can give us true peace is knowing that we always have this state of pure peace, love, and fulfillment underneath any thinking that we may ever have at any given moment. That beautiful state we always want is something we can never lose, but only forget. But just because we can forget it doesn’t mean it’s not there. Just like when it becomes night and the sun sets, we know that the sun is always there, we just can’t see it. If we thought when the sun sets that it may never come back, then understandably we will have a lot of anxious and fearful thoughts. The same is true for our state of being.

We are ever really one moment away from remembering that we always have that inRnite well of clarity, love, joy, peace, and fulRllmentWe will forget sometimes, but when we do remember and realize that we are caught up in our thinking when we experience negative emotions, that alone will allow us to return back home to our natural beautiful state. All we have to do is remember it, know that this is just our thinking, and have peace knowing that the sun is not gone forever and that it will rise again soon enough. Having that understanding will allow us to also appreciate the nighttime for its existence and role in the Universe. From that we can see how it is meant to be a part of our human experience and begin to cherish its beauty as much as the sun.

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