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Time off?!
Also, if you actually itemize what many frenetically “busy” people do every week, my bet would be that they (we, you) have far more leisure time than they think, it is just that instead of using the time to unwind and recharge they just fill it up with more stuff and distractions, eg, surfing the internet, driving places, organized leisure activities, computer games, Netflix. Having fun on the outside, perhaps, but feeling preoccupied on the inside. So leisure time feels busy too.
Flying recently, the moment we touched down almost every single person on that plane grabbed their phone. That withdrawal and addiction – it’s a bit like smoking, only smoking has been banned from public places whereas everyone can indulge their addiction for digital data. Scratching that itch – where is the happiness in that? We can’t live like that. Here’s an experiment: how long can you last without wanting to pick up your smartphone?! (I am talking to myself here.)
So technology, for all its uses, has not helped in this regard. The fleeting world is always-on — texts, tweets, emails, and status updates. (Also, on another subject, we are not really “connected” — we are isolated because we have no time to think deeply about each other or reality.) Now of course you can even get an Apple Watch that gives your wrist a little electric shock to announce all the wildly exciting alerts that cannot wait, even if you are actually trying to have an interesting conversation with someone. (It’s a bit like when servers interrupt deep, meaningful conversations at restaurants to ask if everything is ok?! Is it just me who gets bugged by that?!) That watch sounds like torture to me. Apparently the average video etc screen also changes every 7 to 11 seconds – now how does that not constitute over-stimulation?! There may be excitement in it, perhaps, but there is no real happiness if there is no real peace.
Froth and sparkles
Peace comes from concentration, being able to stay on one object. Single-tasking, not multi-tasking. If we are identifying entirely with the froth and sparkles on top of the ocean, oblivious to the vast stillness and peace beneath, there is not much peace in that.
I reckon we have plenty of time to meditate and get in touch with who we are, really, if we want to. Certainly enough time. Is there anyone who absolutely cannot find 20 minutes a day to meditate? Although we may complain at first that it is just another pressure on our to-do list, the reality is that it will open up the space and time we need for the rest of our day. The time to meditate is when you don’t have time for it.
In this way, we’ll have more freedom. Otherwise we are a bit like mindless automatons — the opposite of meditators. (What do you do first thing in the morning – reach for Facebook or absorb into your heart chakra?!) I read a study recently about what happened when people lost their iPhone – out of 100 people, 73 experienced panic, 8 experienced physical sickness, 7 felt nervous, and only 7 were cool with it.
“But I’m too busy to meditate!”
And, as mentioned, I would argue that we are not necessarily doing more, or getting more things done, not in the grand scheme of things — but just feeling busier. My teacher Geshe Kelsang, for example, has thousands of centers and students and a universal feeling of responsibility for others — if anyone has a right to feel under pressure, busy, or overextended it is him, but he is the most spacious, blissful, relaxed person you’ll ever meet.
If you are new to meditation it is good to keep it short and sweet – 5, 10, or 15 minutes. Our mind is like an out of control elephant! (that’s what Buddha said). The mind is the most powerful force in the universe – for destruction or creativity. If we have no control over it, we have no control over our lives. When people start meditating they can often only manage about 3 minutes before they even forget they’re supposed to be meditating – so don’t worry if you feel like that, I wish I had a dollar for every time some says, “I am too distracted to meditate!” It gets better quickly, but you have to want to do it. For example, you manage to concentrate on your driving for considerably more than 3 minutes, presumably as you want to stay alive. You don’t text when you drive.
“You’re not that busy.”
Another tip for not feeling so overwhelmingly busy is to stop insisting to ourself that we’re overwhelmingly busy, because the truth is that we are all much less busy than we think we are. We can say to ourselves instead, “You’re not that busy”, or even “I have lots of time”, and then calmly do one thing after another. Living in the moment gives us all the time we need.
Swimming in a bathtub
Someone the other day put a good analogy on Facebook (that fount of all knowledge!) of swimming in the bathtub — splashing around hurting our limbs, and not really getting anywhere. Whereas the same strokes in a vast ocean feel blissful and expansive. So we can do the same daily activities either in the bathtub or in the ocean of the clarity and stillness of our own peaceful mind.
In meditation, we can relax into the natural rhythm of the breath. We can experience a moment by moment presence of mind, or mindfulness. We can get in touch with the present moment by getting in touch with the clarity and peace of our own mind. So we can rest our mind in meditation, and then bring that peace with us into daily life. We don’t forget about it but keep tuning into it, and everything becomes lighter, easier, and less frantic.
Comments welcome! (If you have time.)
11 Comments
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Love this article a lot, thank-you 🙂 and will try the suggestions. Just one thing I would alter, perhaps saying “I have lots of time” may be more effective than saying “I’m not that busy” (so as to accentuate the positive)…? 🙂
Edited the article accordingly, thank you!
Absolutely loved this article! Thank you! Will try to put this into practice. I have also been thinking many of us get wrapped up into the whole “busy” means “fulfilled life”, but “busy” doesn’t necessarily mean meaningful. This whole “busy”= good life is difficult not to get sucked into. It’s almost like conditioned behavior of our time. It’s as if we wrap ourselves into secondary meaningless activities to not have to deal with any of our more important issues, the people in our lives, etc.. My Aunt calls them “fake” problems. A bit of a distraction from other more fundamental problems. I also agree with you when you say that we are “less connected” with all this technology. There is so much more opportunity to be “aware” of our friends and family’s lives, but not “involved” in their lives. I am grateful for the ability to connect with my friends and family via this technology. However, I often find it a shame when it turns “deeper” connections we have had into a mediocre connection hidden behind a screen. I loved the analogy of swimming in a bathtub, versus the ocean. It’s all a matter of what we do with our time!
Thank you Claudine, what a great comment! Especially coming from a mom with 5 kids and a job!!! If you can find time, anyone can. “Fake” problems, ha ha!! True.
beautiful and excellent topic to start the week. thank you
my pleasure 🙂
So on target! I have heard MANY people say that they were so glad that overwhelming business (usually kids) came along, because locking horns with the tough questions of being a person inhabiting the universe was killing them. They claim to actually be glad that something came along to render them too busy to engage in the human endeavor.
Interesting. It does take courage to ask the existential questions but as Socrates said “the unexamined life is not worth living.”
Reminds me of the study i mentioned here that show people don’t like to be left alone with their thoughts for too long http://kadampalife.org/2014/09/05/dont-leave-me-alone-in-here-a-buddhists-thoughts-on-smartphone-addiction/
I loved what you wrote in a previous article about how we are experiencing a concentration and mindfulness deficit and not a time deficit 🙂
🙂