Mindfulness
A disciple and his teacher were walking through the
forest. The disciple was disturbed by the fact that his mind was in constant
unrest. He asked his teacher: "Why most people's minds are restless, and
only a few possess a calm mind? What can one do to still the mind?"
The teacher looked at the disciple, smiled and
said:
"I will tell you a story. An elephant was standing and picking leaves from
a tree. A small fly came, flying and buzzing near his ear. The elephant waved
it away with his long ears. Then the fly came again, and the elephant waved it
away once more". This was repeated several times. Then the elephant asked
the fly:
"Why are you so restless and noisy? Why can't you stay for a while in one
place?"
The fly answered:
"I am attracted to whatever I see, hear or smell. My five senses pull me
constantly in all directions and I cannot resist them. What is your secret? How
can you stay so calm and still?"
The elephant stopped
eating and said:
"My five senses do not rule my attention. Whatever I do, I get immersed in
it. Now that I am eating, I am completely immersed in eating. In this way I can
enjoy my food and chew it better. I rule and control my attention, and not the
other way around."
Upon hearing these
words, the disciple's eyes opened wide and a smile appeared on his face. He
looked at his teacher and said:
"I understand! If my five senses are in control of my mind and attention,
then my mind is in constant unrest. If I am in charge of my five senses and
attention, then my mind becomes calm".
"Yes, that's
right", answered the teacher, " The mind is restless and goes
wherever the attention is. Control your attention, and you control your
mind".
Sometimes, you wish to
go for a walk, knowing how good it is for your health and how wonderful you
feel afterwards, yet, you feel too lazy, and prefer to watch TV instead, or sleep a little more. We may be aware of the fact that we need to change eating habits or stop a
bad habit, yet, we don't have the inner power and persistence to change these
habits.
Does this sound
familiar? How many times have we said, "I wish I had will power and self
discipline"? How many times have we started to do something, only to quit
after a short while? We all have had experiences like these.
Everyone has inner,
unconscious, or partly conscious impulses, making them say or do things they
later regret saying or doing. On many occasions people do not think before they
talk or act. By developing will power
and mindfulness, one becomes conscious of the inner, subconscious impulses, and
gains the ability to reject them when they are not for his/her own good or for anyone else.
In today’s world we
are surrounded by temptations of all kinds which can lead us on the wrong path
very easily. An individual’s actions must be governed by the fact that whatever
he does at any moment in time he must never regret it later. To be able to do
this there is only one tool in all our hands which is “ mindfulness”. All
great men and women have mastered this art which was instrumental in leading
them to the path of success.
All of us at some
point of time have to do tasks and jobs which we don’t like to do but we have
to do it. None of us can escape from this truth. Chanakya in the Arthshastra
says, “Only doing whatever pleases him does not achieve anything” (7.11.35) We
often do many things that we are not supposed to do like watching TV in excess,
eating unhealthy food, mindlessly using gadgets and wasting time in unproductive activities and later repent
about the lost time. By practicing mindfulness we would be putting all our
time to productive use.
The source of
discipline could initially be external like parents putting some
restrictions on activities of their children, teachers forcing students to
abide by rules to inculcate discipline. But eventually this external motivator must become intrinsic motivation.
Swami Vivekananda says, “The body is but an outer covering of the
mind and whatever the mind will dictate to it, it will have to carry out. So
there is nothing to be afraid of.” Understanding this philosophy and practicing
it in its true sense is mindfulness.
The youth today is very intelligent, is exposed to immense
resources and information and have abundant energy. But they are also
surrounded by lot of negativities all around which takes the youth in the wrong
direction. Mindfulness helps a person to unite and assimilate all his
scattered thoughts, helps him/her overcome fear and make him/her very strong, and rise to a higher level of thinking.
An effective method
for developing and improving these abilities is to perform certain actions or
activities, which one would rather avoid doing due to laziness,
procrastination, weakness, shyness, etc. By doing something that one does not
like doing or are too lazy to do, one overcomes subconscious resistance,
trains mind to obey, strengthen inner powers and gain inner
strength. Inner strength is attained by overcoming inner resistance. This makes
a great difference in everyone’s life, and brings inner strength, self mastery
and decisiveness.
Finally discipline is not inborn in us. We cultivate it during our
life. We may fail often but that should not demotivate us to give up practicing
self discipline. Discipline leads us to mindfulness. Regularly practicing mindfulness through a disciplined life will help us to enjoy weekends and holidays to its fullest as we have completed all our tasks on time by overcoming procrastination and have set aside time exclusively to unwind. Moreover the satisfaction derived by engaging in any work with complete mindfulness greatly enhances our overall life satisfaction.
Wishing you all a Happy Dushera and a Mindful year ahead.
So correct ya. The 'mind is so full' most of the time, mindfulness is a must do /try for one and all.
ReplyDeleteDeep and insightful. To control our minds is a huge achievement.
ReplyDeleteSo the question is, how to learn to be mindful? Try this, children and adults both will benefit -
ReplyDeletehttps://www.vridhamma.org/onlinecc
Thank you. Checked it. My views will discuss in another blog someday.
DeleteWill look forward to that, take your time. 👍
DeleteVery thought provoking as all your other articles
ReplyDeleteLoved it!
ReplyDeleteGreat read again!
ReplyDeleteMore so, a person who keeps discipline reveals and influences others around him. His actions would speak louder and that teaches a lot. I am a perpetual late Lateef and would never reach anywhere a little early. Couldn't ever mend it and almost stopped regretting either. I would meet a friend at my morning walks and he would consistently come on time and wait for me. Never would he tell me once about not being on time. This would make me all the more guilty. Today, I stand proud to have ment a bad old habbit.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations. Yeah am familiar with your old habit of not being punctual. Good it's been corrected. Punctuality is just one aspect of the huge space of mindfulness. Explore other zones too.
Delete!