Hi Chris :-)
I think I understand what you are getting at a little better, but am not sure. I have tried your experiment with a couple of objects, like a park bench and a drink. They are either there, being experienced in one way or another, or they are not. In essence, when they are not being experienced in some way, they practically vanish. I have tried looking at, then turning away, from a few other objects. One second there, next second, gone.
Yes, ultimately if there's no direct experience of something right here and now, then anything we might think we are experiencing about it can only be thought content.
Questions: If thinking about something from the past or future - when exactly does that thought about it take place? Is the thought happening in the past, present or future? Is it possible to experience a thought happening in any time-frame other than right now?
There is not 100% proof they anything actually exists when we are not experiencing it. We were taught that they exist, I think. I have a lot of thoughts right now telling me I am just being philosophical, and this could be true. But there is a part of me that actually kind of wonders whether I should simply take it for granted that something exists when I am not experiencing it.
Whether the 'world' exists outside of thoughts is a slightly different are of investigation which can be looked into once the 'I' thought has been investigated fully but we won't look at this during this dialogue. Right now it would only be speculation and theorising. The important thing is that you're seeing for yourself that thought content cannot be seen as true - it may point vaguely towards the truth but the truth cannot be found in thoughts or thinking. This is quite a shocker at first! It explains why you may have read many books and gained plenty of knowledge about insight into 'no-self' and you may totally 'get it' and understand it - however, what difference does it really make knowing something intellectually? Does it effect suffering on a day to day basis? Mikes experience is that while it's all very interesting and often fascinating - that path can last many many years without any true insight. All that is achieved by learning - is another 'idea' or 'concept'.
Thoughts seem real in the sense that they are hooked up to "me", this body or mind that I identify with. They seem to , in some way, create some sort of virtual reality, made up of images, beliefs, opinions. Kind of like a blaring talk radio show, which drowns out actually experiencing things in the present properly. I admit I don't exactly know where the thoughts are coming from. It tells me "the brain" or something like that, and I don't completely believe it, but It's as good an answer as any I guess. I guess thoughts are real, I don't know to be honest.
This is great Chris - you're not just blindly accepting thoughts which arise - you're seeing that thought content contains no direct reality at all, any answer you write here, if based on thoughts, concepts or ideas is only ever speculation but when reporting as best you can from what is truly and undeniably happening right here and right now, this you can be sure is the truth. If it is not experienced or accessable directly right now, then it makes sense that it's simply a thought 'about' something and cannot be seen as reliable.
I can see that thought content is often false. I look at some beliefs I had, say 10 years ago, and I can see that they seem to be false, even ridiculous. But I think you are getting at something deeper here. Maybe the fact that so much thought content, even when doing the experiments.
These experiments are showing you first hand what's actually happening and what's undeniable - it's a process of gradually separating Reality from Delusion.
...even when doing the experiments is false, along with the related imagery. It does seem that thought content can be useful at times, such as when doing practical things. But that does not mean the same thing as REAL i understand. It can help you access something which is real, but not actually real itself.
Yes, thinking can be useful especially when working out virtual outcomes etc... There's no problem in having thoughts (try stopping them!) The problem comes from believing them to be our Reality.
I am noticing a lot of mental strain and confusion right now. I seem to get that a lot when I am trying to find the truth about something. My mind goes into "confusion" mode, when I am trying to understand what is actually going on with it!
Yes you've nailed it here Chris - trying to get to the truth using the mind is exhausting, the ego mind will use a huge amount of energy protecting the belief that the ideas you have are real - remember, one of those ideas is that 'you', 'Chris', the 'Self' really does exist as the idea or concept tells you it exists.
Please refer back to this anytime the mind begins to interrupt the simple reality of right now in Direct Experience - you are likely to see with clarity, then the mind will create a story around it in an effort to make you doubt the truth.
Now let's move onto the Self as the 'controller' of Chris' life. After all, if you exist, then you must be in control right?
The exercise here is to walk about and move your body randomly and quickly - wave your arms, move your legs etc... Look closely at what's happening while you do this. Is there 'choices' being made about what movements are made or do they simply happen? Is Chris controlling this movement (walking is another good example) or is it just happening and there is experience of it happening?
Mike
To the first questions: The thought about the past or future event can only take place now, at least as far as I can tell. Despite the fact that the thought content may pertain to past or future, that does not change this fact. If I think about, for example, getting a coffee, I may desire having the coffee, as a future event, but that desire for the coffee is happening now, along with the images and thoughts about the coffee. But then when I have the coffee, the previous thoughts about the coffee are past tense, and the experience of the coffee is now.
To the exercise with the body: The thinking "self" likes to claim responsibility for all actions of the body, as much as possible. So I find it difficult to say exactly how much thought is responsible. It often is responsible, but not always, and it doesn't seem to be to the extent that it claims it is.
For example, it appears as though I give a command to "flail my arms around" and later "stop". But then the movements happen, and it seems beyond thought's ability to dictate exactly how it is happening. I deliberately tried to make it so that it would be hard for thought to get in there and control. It just seemed to be going all too fast and randomly for thought to go in and just dictate the exact movements. You can only think a few thoughts a second, after all.
Often, it seems the body makes movements, without the mind's consent at all. Sometimes I catch myself shaking my legs while sitting, and I am completely unaware of it, until thought brings my attention to it.
Walking is pretty obvious for me. I haven't actually gone for a walk yet since last night, and I intend to do this with this question in mind. However, I tend to get completely lost in thought while walking, but the vast majority of those thoughts are not about instructions on how to walk! The body in question is 38 years old, no need for that! You never know, when it is 78, it may need some instructions due to advanced aging, but for now, absolutely not.
There is also the experience of these actions happening. It seems that the fact that one does not need the mind's instructions to perform certain bodily tasks does not mean that they should not be experienced fully. So it seems like the mind tends to discard activities that it does not consider worthy of thinking about, in the sense that they become unconscious. So it just seems to use the body to, for example, go to the mall to buy stuff, or something like that. It needs the body to walk, or drive, or whatever, but it's not going to bother really caring about the walking or driving, that's just a means to an end, getting the thing that it wants, in the future. The mind instead thinks about "more important" things.
So, in short, it seems, that the mind tends to contract out the services of the body, and so is related in that way, but in many ways, the body is independent of the mind's instructions. Kind of like a boss who likes to order his employees around, takes credit for all their work, and does not really think of them as human beings, and does not really truly know them. They are just there to fulfill his supposed "needs"