Today’s a Sunday! And you may be “busy” doing something or the other. Like watching TV. Or catching up on your reading. Or running errands with your kids or for them. You may want to do several things today which you can’t do during the week. Which is why I cautiously say you may well be busy!
But have you considered doing nothing? And
just being in a state of nothingness?
Let me share some learnings that will also
help clarify some myths we hold about doing nothing and being in a state of
nothingness!
Doing nothing does not mean not thinking.
Because the mind can never be thoughtless. Doing nothing is about getting your
mind to be alive than active. About getting it to differentiate between ‘action’
and ‘activity’.
The human mind, research has revealed, on an
average, processes 60,000 thoughts daily. A good portion of those thoughts are
about different forms of activities. About getting things done. Or they are about
debilitating emotions like worry, anger, guilt, anxiety and such. The mind goes
on churning these thoughts leading to a series of activities at a pace that
defies logic. Which is why half the people in the world are struck by stress
even before they are 40! Doing nothing slows down the mind. It will still
process 60,000 thoughts, but at a manageable pace where they will lead to
mindful action and not mindless activities. A mind that has experienced that
state of nothingness is more aware. When you are hungry and you eat, it is
action. When you just keep on tucking into the next cookie or samosa at the conference table at work,
that is just activity. When you are listening to your child talk about her day
at school, and watch her every emotion, then it is action. When you merely hear
her speak, but choose to check your mobile phone for mails, it is activity. Our
daily lives are filled with thousands of such activities and very little or no
inspired, informed and intelligent action. Which is why we are unhappy. Which
is why we feel a sense of loss __ of working so hard and yet not enjoying it!
Nothingness cannot be experienced by doing something
about or for it. It is about being. Sundays are a great time experience
nothingness. You literally don’t have to do anything. Or necessarily go
anywhere. No posture is required. No preparation is needed. Just spend a good part
of the day being silent. You be silent, that’s enough. There is no need to
silence the environment. Look at an inspiring sight, from your window or
balcony or terrace, of Life itself. You can possibly see a tree or a garden or
a street. And simply watch Life happen. Now this is important – as
your mind strays towards a worry or a schedule for tomorrow or a painful
memory, just bring it back to attend to Life as you are experiencing it. Remember
the mind is like the human body. It will resist any new regimen that you insist
it embraces. Besides, the mind, through years of your “worldly-wise” conditioning,
has confused itself into a perpetual, stupid, silly “hyper activity” mode. In
fact, unless you tell your family that you are embarking on this “unique experiential
journey”, chances are that you be chided for being lazy, for “doing nothing”
and will be demanded to help with the dishes at least!!! Remember also that
through your entire nothingness experience you must be silent. Our focus
eventually is to stop the endless chatter in your mind, to calm it down and for
it to think and act intelligently than just react hyperactively. Your physical
silence then is a simple, but important, contributor in that direction.
The founder of Taoism, Lao Tzu (600 BC ~ 531
BC), wrote this famously, prophetically too, in his book “Tao Te Ching’ (The
Book of THE Way): “Doing nothing is better than being busy doing nothing.”
It is such a profound and yet so stark, awakening, revelation of our lives in.
In our perpetual hyper-active mode, doing things and getting things done, we
have lost the ability to simply be. We are extremely busy. But when we look
back we have done nothing memorable in terms of living __ intelligently! The
years have gone by. But we have still not lived our lives completely. We have
been taught again, sadly erroneously, that an “empty mind is a devil’s workshop”.
So we have allowed our mind to be filled with gibberish __ worry, fear, anger,
sorrow. We have allowed our mind to always be in a frenzy __ processing one
activity after another, as if it were a sausage machine. This frenzy may have helped
us created more wealth, more assets, but has robbed us of our health, our inner
peace and has left us searching for happiness! If we haven’t been happy with
our Life, what’s the point in having lived it? Haven’t we then been simply busy
doing nothing?!
Only when we empty our minds of all wasteful
emotions and rid it of all activity, will it experience nothingness. In that state
of nothingness is where you will find your consciousness, your Universal Energy
recharge point, your bliss.
Thanks for the Sunday Wisdom Sir. As you said, the best moments of my life were from the time when I was doing nothing but being alive and active lazing around in moutains, or far off places. I dont remember such a thing in my other endeavors. To be silent and watch the world is surely a task that I should season my mind to. Glad that I have stumbled upon this today.
ReplyDeleteAmazing post Sir, Thought-provoking. and I've been through many of these situations where I do something but do not get the sense of satisfaction or peacefulness. I need to start and practice 'nothingness'. Thanks for sharing the thought.
ReplyDeleteKeep smiling,
Lakshmi