We spent the week at a "Seminar of the Now". It's run be wannabe Buddhists who teach you how to deprogram your inner clock, shut down the worry cycles and focus on the NOW.
They told us that there is no past, there is no future--those are merely "ideas" . . . that the only IS is NOW. If you squander your NOW by worrying about the past or worrying about the future . . . you squander your life.
It is actually kind of hard to take control of your thoughts. I have spent some time this week thinking about legacy--about what I will leave this world when i die. and it was kind of depressing. I am just a ripple.
Go to a book store and you see the absurdity of hype and marketing where people try to tell you what's important--but what they're really trying to do is separate you from your money.
If I have no money--they don't care about me.
If I have money--they want my money.
THAT is the big circle of life? It's all about economics? But not the economics of sharing but the economics of mine mine mine . . . .Dougal is starting a book by that title, by the way.
I'm torn. More is never enough. Conspicious consumption is simply stupid ego being manipulated by others who WANT your money and possessions.
Yet I like nice things. I like sleeping in a soft bed. I like meals on time and plenty of them. I enjoy very much sleeping in the sunshine.
So what have I learned about this week?
I do not like alarm clocks. I don't even care for the sound of the timer on the oven, letting me know when the scones are done. It's abrasive and intrusive.
I enjoy very very much sitting outside. even if it's a little humid, the fresh air, the birds calling, the sunlight . . . it is rejuvenating. It feels timeless.
To quiet my mind, I focus on detail projects of the now. Organizing and sorting. It is peaceful, but it is really an avoidance technique. I am filling time with Something--in order not to have the past or the future scare the hell out of me.
And there isn't an answer to "What's the meaning of life?" Or rather there are millions of answers.
In reality the answer is the question itself. Our life is journey with the question, not with the answer.