Hello Deanna,
There’s no pressure to be mindful all the time. There’s either mindfulness or there isn’t.
You are always "mindful" in the sense that you are always aware of your experience.
This mindfulness story has its use and purpose. But I suggest strongly that you forget about this concept for this exploration of self.
You are aware of your experience at this moment. Yes or no?
Who is the one to be mindful or mindless?
Mostly “I” thoughts, “I need, I want, I should”. There’s a vagueness like the thoughts are incomplete, jumbled. In between thoughts is the current day’s “ear worm” song. There’s usually a song, music that I heard earlier on the radio or TV, that fills the silence. The song thoughts don’t have an “l” feeling, they feel impersonal. Until the “why is this song in my brain “ “I”-thought.
Thoughts have an infinite range of qualities even though they appear in a spectrum.
A sound that you are not hearing RIGHT NOW in your direct experience is a thought. Because is a memory.
An image that you are not seeing RIGHT NOW in your direct experience is a thought. Because is a memory.
You get caught up in thoughts because you are still confused between what is your Direct Experience and what is memory and imagination.
Try this exploration:
Finding the Gap
This exercise has a dual purpose. Firstly, to become aware of each and every though as they appear. Secondly, the careful looking for the gap is an example of how carefully to look when looking for the ‘separate self’.
Here is a step-by-step description of how to look at thoughts. First thing is to sit for at least 10-15 minutes quietly somewhere, several times throughout your day. Close your eyes and just notice thoughts. Don’t engage with any thought, just notice them.
1. Notice the current thought that is present.
Like when you sit observing the body, a thought might arise “this is my feet” or “here is a pain” or “my breathing is too quick” or “I am bored with this exercise” or “I have better things to do” or any sorts of thoughts.
2. This thought will pass and another thought will come. So just observe this thought passing.
3. Then wait for the next thought to come.
4. When the next thought is present, just notice it, and see how it passes.
5. Then wait for the next thought to come.
6. Repeat #4 and #5 many-many times.
Between the 2 thoughts there is a gap. It can be very short or subtle, just a second or a few seconds before the next thought come in.
This is how to look at thoughts:-
Looking how they come and go, and
Observing the short gap between them.
Noticing how the current thought is passing.
And waiting for the next thought to come.
Please do the following exercise:
Throughout your waking day, try to observe the gap between thoughts as often as possible. It can be done by noticing that ‘thinking’ is happening right now, then stop and just simply wait for the next thought to come. In the ‘waiting’ there is a gap between two thoughts.
Let me know how you go.