Hi Rali - I apologize for not responding yesterday. I was so exhausted I went to bed very early. Although even as I went to bed, I found myself asking "what is exhaustion?" Just a label over a sensation in my body. Then I thought, whose body? But I was too tired to keep looking. Still, I think the virus analogy makes a lot of sense to me.
And thank you for letting me know you'll be offline for a couple of days. It is very thoughtful as I might have gotten a bit worried. I hope you had a good flight and arrived at your destination safely.
Look carefully:
What is “snapping back”?
Is there something actually moving?
Or is there just a clear seeing and then thoughts appearing again?
Does anything really “go away”?
Or does what is always here simply get covered by thoughts?
Upon looking again, you're right that it doesn't "snap back." It's closer to "I'm able to open my eyes to see the truth but then my eyelids immediately close again." It is indeed that thoughts come back to obscure the seeing.
Right now … Do you need practice to see that there is no actual “voice” in thoughts? That there is no clear boundary between inside and outside?
Or is that already obvious when you look?
I would say that I don't need practice to see that there is no voice in thoughts. But seeing that there is no boundary between inside and outside is a lot harder. It's like the first one is something I can see well because it's right next to me, but the second one I have to strain and squint to see because it's further away.
It’s obvious that there will be resistance to that. So to reduce the resistance you need to painstakingly examine all thoughts one by one as they appear in order for thoughts to self-organise and form a new core of beliefs. And I underlie self-organise as this is not in your control, it just happens. I’ve basically introduced a virus thought (LOOK!) that causes all thoughts to be reorganised around the experience :)
I see now why you said at the start that this would likely be a gradual and subtle process. That used to make me feel impatient, but I don't anymore.
In that moment is there anyone or anything which recognises the thought or is being aware of it?
My mind stubbornly insists that it is me that recognizes it.
Can you see anything that is separate from the thought and does the thinking?
No, I don't see anything like this directly, though I imagine something in front of "me" as the thought/image. Almost like an invisible screen the thought is projecting onto.
Did you do anything to make a particular thought or thoughts appear? Could you have done anything to make a different thought appear at that exact moment instead?
No, though don't we influence what we think about? For example, I could have looked to my left and seen something that sparks a thought about whatever I laid eyes on. Even if I dont' know why I turned my head to the left, it still impacted my next thought.
Can you select from a range of thoughts to have only pleasant thoughts?
Can you choose not to have painful, negative or fearful thoughts?
Ha! I wish... :) But no, I can't. At best, I can suppress a thought by training my attention elsewhere.
Can you pick and choose any kind of thought?
Oh my goodness, my brain glitched when I read this. NO I CAN'T. I don't know why the other questions didn't naturally lead me to conclude this, but it still surprised me.
Is there anything that is responsible for the thoughts like a traffic cop saying which one to go and which one to stay? Can the flow of thoughts be changed?
Where do thoughts appear from? Where are they coming from and going to? Do they appear randomly or in a structured way?
I think sometimes about how when a disturbing or negative thought comes to mind, another thought will emerge that attempts to "interrupt" the negative thought, so in a way it feels like yes, there can be a cop there trying to direct the traffic, but mostly no, the traffic cop isn't there. One thing I do recognize for certain is that the thoughts mostly don't come from anywhere and they disappear right back into nothingness once they've cycled through my awareness. They definitely appear mostly randomly, though many times I can follow a "train of thought" that led to me to thinking about what I ended up thinking about, if that makes sense.
Could you predict the order of their appearance?
Did you know which will be the second or the fourth?
Is it possible to prevent a thought from appearing? Can you stop thinking a thought in the middle? How long does that last? Test it for the fun of exploration.
It seems that thought has some logical ordered appearance, but look carefully and just notice if there is an organised sequence. Or is it just another thought that says ‘these thoughts are in sequence’ or “they take content from previous thought”, or that "one thought follows another thought"?
That was an interesting exercise. I definitely couldn't predict their order of appearance or what thought would emerge second or fourth or any order. No, I can't stop a thought from popping into my head. Though I would have said before that you could. But I just thought to myself "Don't think of a pink elephant" and of course all I could think about is a pink elephant. I couldn't even interrupt it a little. But it does feel like I can purposely distract away from thoughts, which is kind of like stopping or changing my thoughts. And yes, the idea that the thoughts follow logically and sequentially is just another thought. Only a couple of the thoughts I wrote down were even connected to one another.
Are thoughts 100% true?
What are you, when you don't think about what you are?
My thoughts are not 100% but they are 100% real as mental events, and my mind sometimes interprets real = true. Never realized that before! :)
When I don't think about what I am, I am nothing. Just awareness. But I think constantly about "myself' so it feels like "I'm" always there.