BOOK - How to Gain Freedom from
Your Thoughts
Dan Siegel explains how meditation can help us transcend limiting
beliefs and discover more presence and possibility in life.
If you practice meditation, you probably spend a lot of time
training your focus—on the breath, the body, or your wandering thoughts and
feelings. But if you only train focus, you may be missing out on some profound
benefits.
Another valuable skill is called open awareness, where we simply
rest in the awareness of awareness, feeling what it’s like to be conscious
without paying attention to anything in particular. In everyday life, open
awareness means approaching situations with fresh eyes, letting go of our
habitual reactions and our expectations for the future.
Open awareness is part of the Wheel of Awareness practice, a
meditation tool I’ve developed over many years and offered to thousands of
individuals around the world. In the Wheel, we imagine awareness lying at the
center of a hub and sending out spokes of attention to points on the
rim—focusing on our first five senses; the interior signals of the body, such
as sensations from our muscles or lungs; the mental activities of feelings,
thoughts, and memories; and finally our sense of connection to other people and
to nature. To practice open awareness on the Wheel, we visualize bending the
spoke of attention around so it aims back into the hub, retracting the spoke,
or simply leaving it in the hub.
In my new book Aware,
I offer a complete guide to the Wheel of Awareness and what may be
happening in the brain when you practice it. While open awareness is one of the
most advanced contemplative techniques, my research and clinical experience
suggest that it has the potential to offer us more freedom, peace, and
well-being in our lives.
The power of open
awareness
Some people find that being aware of awareness is quite new. Some
find it confusing, disorienting, difficult to hold on to. Some find it bizarre.
In one workshop, for example, a participant called this
awareness-of-awareness experience “really odd.” When I asked what “odd” felt
like, he said, “I mean, it was really weird.” So I asked him what “weird” felt
like, and he said, “Just really strange.”
I gently suggested that he stop comparing it to other experiences,
and instead simply describe the feeling. He was silent, and then he smiled. His
expression glowed, and he said, “It was incredibly peaceful. It was so clear,
so empty, yet so full. It was amazing.”
He was not alone. Others in that same group, and in workshops
around the world, have come to say similar things. Here are some of the phrases
that have been used to try to express what awareness of awareness feels like
for them: “As wide as the sky.” “As deep as the ocean.” “Complete peace.”
“Joy.” “Tranquility.” “Safety.” “Connection to the world.” “God.” “Love.” “At
home in the universe.” “Timelessness.” “Expansive.” “Infinity.”
And the pattern keeps on emerging as people dive into the
practice. One participant even handed me a note; it said she couldn’t openly
state what happened in that step, which she experienced as “an amazing sense of
expansiveness and peace, a feeling of wholeness I’ve never had before,” because
she thought others would think she was bragging. One person said he felt so
much love that he couldn’t share that experience for fear his professional
colleagues in the seminar would consider him weak. Recently, I offered the
Wheel practice to three thousand people in one room, and hundreds raised their
hands when asked if they felt a sense of expansiveness or a loss of time. As I
captured in a systematic survey, these descriptions share very similar themes
of love, joy, and wide-open timelessness.
What is going on here? Why would these statements, though not
expressed by all, be offered from such a disparate group of people from around
the world?
To be clear, some participants have great difficulty with this
step and don’t offer any descriptions, or simply say that their minds wandered,
they felt confused, or they simply focused on the breath. Each time I do my
regular Wheel practice myself, this hub-in-hub step feels subtly different.
Sometimes a shift doesn’t even seem to happen and I am stuck on the rim,
thinking of things I hope would happen, or being swept up by memories of past
hub-in-hub practices and wishing those would occur again. If I expect things to
go a certain way, they usually don’t.
According to journalist Daniel Goleman and
neuroscientist Richard Davidson, the brains of longtime
mindfulness practitioners look different when they are practicing open
awareness meditation. Gamma waves—which, for most of us, occur briefly and in
one spot of the brain—are elevated all across their brains, corresponding to
the sense of vastness and spaciousness they feel. Neuropsychiatric researcher
Judson Brewer and colleagues also found similar electrical patterns during a range of meditative
practices that are called “effortless awareness”—a state of being aware of
whatever arises as it arises.
Social neuroscientist Mary Helen Immordino-Yang has also found that these attentional states are
associated with neural firing in primitive brain stem regions associated with
the most basic life processes. This state of awe and gratitude, this joy for
life, is an inner sense of vitality and a relational sense of connection to the
larger world around us. We can propose that open awareness naturally gives rise
to the subjective experience of joy, awe, and peace—of meaning, love, and
connection.
How filters constrain us
My patient Mona was a forty-year-old mother of three children
under the age of ten, who found herself often at the end of her rope. She was
raising her children without much help from her spouse or family and friends,
and was becoming easily irritated with them, and then irate with herself for
feeling this way. She had frequent experiences of shutting down and distancing
herself from her children, and chaotic outbursts of sadness and anger.
This
essay is adapted from Aware: The Science and Practice of
Presence—The Groundbreaking Meditation Practice (TarcherPerigee,
2018, 400 pages).
Mona began to practice the Wheel of Awareness, and it enabled her
to build the internal resources to become more present and aware. Practicing
open awareness became a sanctuary of relief from her feelings of rage and
burnout. It became easier for her to witness her children’s behavior and
experiences, and see new options for how to respond.
Why is open awareness so powerful? Without it, we typically see
the world through a set of filters that can constrain our experience and keep
us stuck in painful patterns of emotion.
Neuroscientists commonly call the brain an “anticipation machine.”
To predict and get ready for what is going to happen next, it constructs a
perceptual filter that selects and organizes what we actually become aware of
based on what we’ve experienced before. Filters shape what we focus on, which
in turn influences the information our brains receive. And filters help us
survive: If we are driving a car, we need to be scanning the road ahead for
obstacles and primed to step on the brakes rapidly, filtering our options to a
select few so that we can react quickly when needed.
Filters help us make sense of life and feel safe and secure in an
often confusing, unpredictable world. As the military and other organizations
like to say, we live in a time of “VUCA”—volatility, uncertainty, complexity,
and ambiguity. In this challenging moment in human history, certain people may
be hardening their filters unconsciously in an attempt to make the world seem
more predictable and less threatening—one potential way of understanding
today’s extreme worldviews and sharp political divisions.
And filters continually reinforce themselves, giving us the
appearance that what we perceive through them is accurate and complete. We
might even see this as the basis of confirmation bias, where we selectively pay
attention to evidence that conforms to our existing beliefs. We do not have
immaculate perception; we perceive what we already believe.
Our human journey itself may be vulnerable to the development of
rigid filters. Once we are adults and perhaps even before, during adolescence
or late childhood, we’ve developed certain filters around our sense of self.
They come from trying to fit into our social worlds, and trying to make sense
of our personal experiences. Our top-down filters tell us who we are and what
our personality is, how we typically behave, and what kind of future is open to
us.
This may be why, as we move into adolescence and beyond, life can
become dulled. We begin to filter too much through the knowledge and skills
acquired through prior learning and lose touch with the novelty of “beginner’s
mind”—a mind that is open and eager, without preconceptions. The social
psychologist Ellen Langer has revealed that being open to fresh distinctions is
a source of well-being and vitality. In Langer’s work, appreciating novel distinctions
enhances our health and our learning.
The downside of such a filtering of reality is that we become
limited in what we experience. Rigid filters may make it challenging to be
present in life. We judge people and events before we allow ourselves to even
experience them openly. But often we’re not aware of our filters, and we don’t
even inquire as to their existence or validity.
Major growth can occur when we cultivate open awareness and lose
or loosen some of the filters that arise in our lives—whether those filters
represent our expectations about the future, our biases about other people, or
the limitations we place on ourselves. But how to do this?
One way, of course, is to cultivate access to our hub beneath the
filters of our rim. But beyond that, we can also be playful and have a sense of
humor about who we are. Laughter and humor are gateways to open awareness and
connection with others. Jokes are funny because they move in an unexpected
direction—not where our filters expected the punchline to go. For a brief
moment, we’re wrestling with something we never saw coming. It feels as if
top-down expectations are meeting bottom-up surprise.
In that way, humor actually opens us up to new learning and more
openness. It likely enhances neuroplasticity as it promotes a receptive state
and makes learning last longer as the brain may be more likely to grow new
connections in that open state, and it builds trust and connection with others.
Not bad for a good chuckle.
So this is your challenge: You can use your mind to shift the
patterns in your relationships with others and in your brain. You are not a
captive prisoner, even though your mental filters will tend to move you into old
patterns. Getting lost in familiar places is a natural vulnerability we all
have; using your mind and your capacity to be aware is how you can find your
way. Patience and persistence will be your friends along this path to greater
freedom.
BY DANIEL
SIEGEL
https://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/how_to_gain_freedom_from_your_thoughts?utm_source=Greater+Good+Science+Center&utm_campaign=92ce4d79d6-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_GG_Newsletter_Aug_22_2018&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_5ae73e326e-92ce4d79d6-51482775
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