Pushing away thoughts vs bringing your focus back to the present moment

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  • Douglas
    Member
    • May 2017
    • 91

    Pushing away thoughts vs bringing your focus back to the present moment

    Hello all,

    During Zazen, I often find myself wondering whether I'm pushing a thought away when I redirect my focus to my breath and the present moment. If you notice your mind wandering and then bring it back to your breath, is that not avoiding the thought that I noticed my mind wandering to?

    thank you!

    -sat today
  • Bion
    Senior Priest-in-Training
    • Aug 2020
    • 5372

    #2
    Pushing away thoughts vs bringing your focus back to the present moment

    Once the thought is there, you’ve already failed at avoiding it and noticing it simply means you’ve stopped engaging with it for enough time to catch yourself lost in it. So, at this point, the next step is an actual choice: go back to the thought and engage with it, or continue with zazen.

    That is just my - probably insufficient - take on that process. But, take it please, as just another practitioner’s ideas, and not some teaching. This novice monk is clueless most of the time. ( thus the wall gazing ) Sorry for running a bit long.

    Gassho
    Sat and lah
    Last edited by Bion; 02-17-2024, 12:16 PM.
    "A person should train right here & now.
    Whatever you know as discordant in the world,
    don't, for its sake, act discordantly,
    for that life, the enlightened say, is short." - The Buddha

    Comment

    • Houzan
      Member
      • Dec 2022
      • 603

      #3
      Pushing away thoughts vs bringing your focus back to the present moment

      Bion said it so well[emoji120]
      Having struggled with the same question for a while myself, my current approach, based on my simple understanding of the helpful guidance from this sangha, is this:
      My zazen is perfectly fine as long as I remember that a thought about whether I push away thoughts is a thought itself, so just let go of this thought as well.

      Gassho, Hōzan
      Satlah
      Last edited by Houzan; 02-17-2024, 12:49 PM.

      Comment

      • Jundo
        Treeleaf Founder and Priest
        • Apr 2006
        • 41653

        #4
        Don't overthink this question (pun intended)

        The way not to be bothered by a thought is not to be bothered by a thought. Just let it be, neither running towards nor running away.

        Do not try to be in the moment, do not try to redirect to the breath ... do not try, do not need to try or not try.

        If wandering, just stop wandering and return to "not trying."

        Cars pass on the mind's highway. Sit quietly at the side of the road as they pass, do not get in. If finding oneself getting in for a ride, just again be at the side of the road as they pass.

        Shikantaza is counter-intuitive that way. One thinks one must do something when, all along, the doing or trying to stop doing, or need to do or to stop to do ... is the very problem.

        Gassho, J

        stlah
        ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

        Comment

        • Bion
          Senior Priest-in-Training
          • Aug 2020
          • 5372

          #5
          Originally posted by Jundo
          Do not try to be in the moment, do not try to redirect to the breath ... do not try, do not need to try or not try.

          If wandering, just stop wandering and return to "not trying."

          stlah
          Thanks for that! I’ll try to remember it, cause it is really good!

          Gassho
          Sat and lah
          "A person should train right here & now.
          Whatever you know as discordant in the world,
          don't, for its sake, act discordantly,
          for that life, the enlightened say, is short." - The Buddha

          Comment

          • Seiko
            Novice Priest-in-Training
            • Jul 2020
            • 1248

            #6
            Originally posted by Douglas
            Hello all,

            During Zazen, I often find myself wondering whether I'm pushing a thought away when I redirect my focus to my breath and the present moment. If you notice your mind wandering and then bring it back to your breath, is that not avoiding the thought that I noticed my mind wandering to?

            thank you!

            -sat today
            Fukanzazenji is my "go to".

            Gasshō
            Seiko
            stlah
            Gandō Seiko
            頑道清光
            (Stubborn Way of Pure Light)

            My street name is 'Al'.

            Any words I write here are merely the thoughts of an apprentice priest, just my opinions, that's all.

            Comment

            • Douglas
              Member
              • May 2017
              • 91

              #7
              Thank you for all of your suggestions. I do "get" what jundo is saying..well...if it can be "got". Words don't really work.

              -Sat today

              Comment

              • Kaitan
                Member
                • Mar 2023
                • 602

                #8
                Originally posted by Jundo
                Shikantaza is counter-intuitive that way. One thinks one must do something when, all along, the doing or trying to stop doing, or need to do or to stop to do ... is the very problem.
                Gasshō

                stlah, Kaitan
                Kaitan - 界探 - Realm searcher

                Comment

                • Jundo
                  Treeleaf Founder and Priest
                  • Apr 2006
                  • 41653

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Jundo
                  Don't overthink this question (pun intended)

                  The way not to be bothered by a thought is not to be bothered by a thought. Just let it be, neither running towards nor running away.

                  Do not try to be in the moment, do not try to redirect to the breath ... do not try, do not need to try or not try.

                  If wandering, just stop wandering and return to "not trying."

                  Cars pass on the mind's highway. Sit quietly at the side of the road as they pass, do not get in. If finding oneself getting in for a ride, just again be at the side of the road as they pass.

                  Shikantaza is counter-intuitive that way. One thinks one must do something when, all along, the doing or trying to stop doing, or need to do or to stop to do ... is the very problem.

                  Gassho, J

                  stlah
                  Suppose there is a plant in a vase in the corner room where you sit, visible out of the corner of your eye as you face the open wall in Zazen. It it fine. It does not require watering now, nor any tending. You may notice it now and then, and it is nice (or maybe not so nice and demands care later), but really no need to notice or ponder it right now. You might notice it is there now and then, which is fine, but then forget about it, ignore it much of the time, let it be during the time of sitting. If it requires watering or care, you can do that after sitting. Not now. It is lovely and there even without your attention to it now. Seen but not pondered, or ignored and not pondered ... all the same. Sometimes the plant completely drops from mind. Let your thoughts be like that plant.

                  If you think about the plant (think about your thoughts), and get tangled in thoughts about the plant (thoughts about your thoughts) ... that is your doing so, not the plant. The plant is not asking you to think about it. It is not asking you to judge it. The plant receives light, so needs nothing from you in fact.



                  There is not really anything to think about. It is just there, left alone. You see it, but do not think about it.

                  Now, pretend that the plant is your thoughts, present in the room of your mind. Let your passing thoughts be like the plant ... present, but nothing to think about. Likewise, your thoughts may be present in your mind, but your thoughts are nothing to think about or judge. Do not think about your thoughts, like you do not think about a plant that is in your room for years and requires no tending, moving, judging. I do not mean to blank out your mind so that there is no plant. I mean that your room is fine, open, bright, spacious whether there is a thought-plant or no thought-plant there.

                  No need to return to the breath in Shikantaza (although some do breath practice.) Just have your mind as the open, spacious room which allows all to be within it without judgement. Does the room think about the plant that is in it? In fact, the plant is the room, the room is the plant and all else contained. No need to "be in the present moment." Where else can one be? Does the room try to "be in the moment?" Just let the room be, the plant be ... no need to mentally ponder it, water it, move it, judge it ... just sit.

                  Do not try to think about the plant, do not try not to think about the plant ... just be the room and do not ponder the plant. Let the thoughts be, you will tend to them later.

                  Gassho, J

                  stlah

                  tsuku.jpg
                  Last edited by Jundo; 02-18-2024, 06:54 AM.
                  ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

                  Comment

                  • Furyu
                    Member
                    • Jul 2023
                    • 277

                    #10

                    Ramine
                    Sat-lah
                    風流 - Fūryū - Windflow

                    Comment

                    • Seijin
                      Member
                      • Nov 2023
                      • 59

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Jundo
                      Don't overthink this question (pun intended)

                      The way not to be bothered by a thought is not to be bothered by a thought. Just let it be, neither running towards nor running away.

                      Do not try to be in the moment, do not try to redirect to the breath ... do not try, do not need to try or not try.

                      If wandering, just stop wandering and return to "not trying."

                      Cars pass on the mind's highway. Sit quietly at the side of the road as they pass, do not get in. If finding oneself getting in for a ride, just again be at the side of the road as they pass.

                      Shikantaza is counter-intuitive that way. One thinks one must do something when, all along, the doing or trying to stop doing, or need to do or to stop to do ... is the very problem.

                      Gassho, J

                      stlah


                      Jundo hit the nail here, perfectly. I agree deeply. Our brain desire to think thougts its how we survived from getting killed back in the days, and if it finds a reson to argument for you to focus on the thought (passing car) then its got you attention-mission completed for the brain.

                      I attended a seminar this week at my psychotherapy course. A woman who had struggled all her life with recurrent psycosis was speaking about her experiences. In her story of how she struggled when beeing ill- many of the struggles were about trying find the ulimate truth about reality. Altough she was quite well now she was still longing to find this and thougt that if she was thinking of it enough it would appear. In a psycosis the brain can be extreemly active and makes connections between things that are not connected -for me its a paralell to how all our brains try to mkae sence of things that are not possible to make sense of- we just need to let them pass.
                      (I asked her if it was a possibility to just accept that it could be that we all have different realitys and that they constantly change as everything constanly changes.)

                      Seijin

                      Comment

                      • RobO
                        Member
                        • Jul 2023
                        • 51

                        #12
                        A beginner myself, so please take this as such..

                        My thinking here, and experience has been that these "am I doing it right" thoughts during zazen are just more thoughts and can be treated as such. The feeling of doubt too, is only a feeling, and you can notice that (and then you have already disengaged).

                        I would say (though please correct me someone if I am wrong) coming to terms with the doubt and uncertainty is a part of it, the thinking mind wants to be in the driving seat, and for me anyway, these kinds of sneaky thoughts have taken a LOT of my zazen time.

                        If I see I am caught in a thought, and "push it away" and get back to zazen, ok. If I see I am caught in a thought and don't do anything, fantastic (thats enough to get me back to zazen). If I don't even engage with the thought and it floats by, perfect.

                        But if I get caught up in thinking about whether I "didnt do it the right way", "engaged in action", "is there a better way to do it?", "should I post a question..." and so on, my mind trying to solve it, that's a huge amount of extra thoughts added to the mix (this is how thoughts sneakily grab me). Even if I notice and do it imperfectly, it's still way better than getting sucked into a dialogue about zazen during zazen! (there is nothing "wrong" with that either).

                        Sorry, ran very long, and hopefully none of this is too far off the mark!

                        Gassho, Rob
                        Sat / lah

                        Comment

                        • Jundo
                          Treeleaf Founder and Priest
                          • Apr 2006
                          • 41653

                          #13
                          I would say (though please correct me someone if I am wrong) coming to terms with the doubt and uncertainty is a part of it, the thinking mind wants to be in the driving seat, and for me anyway, these kinds of sneaky thoughts have taken a LOT of my zazen time.
                          This is why Zazen should be sat always with a trust, subtle yet deep in the bones, that Zazen is always a complete and self-fulfilling act, nothing lacking, nothing to add, always good. Zazen is a Buddha sitting in one's own sitting.

                          It is the opposite of our always judging mind, which strives for improvement, criticizes and feels lack.

                          You will find more about that here:

                          WHAT's OFTEN MISSING in SHIKANTAZA EXPLANATIONS ....
                          Dear All. I am writing a longer chapter for a book that points up some aspects of sitting Shikantaza that seem to be often missing, misunderstood or understated in many explanations I've read and heard regarding "how to" Shikanataza. In my belief, neglecting these points robs Shikantaza of its power, like fire


                          Gassho, J

                          stlah
                          Last edited by Jundo; 02-19-2024, 03:25 AM.
                          ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

                          Comment

                          • Kaitan
                            Member
                            • Mar 2023
                            • 602

                            #14
                            I just recalled an episode of the podcast by Domyo Burk. It's from the past July 17, 2023. https://open.spotify.com/episode/5Hf...Q_KHYqCXS7Sbeg

                            Zazen as a religious act.

                            I often forget that sitting zazen is the equivalent to prayer, so recognizing sitting zazen as a holy act to connect with the universe and as a ritual definitely makes it easier and motivates me. It also helps me to overcome the "bad" sits and accept them as much as the "good" sits. I know this tradition tends to be more secular, but I find important for my practice to not lose track of the direction.

                            Gasshō

                            stlah, Kaitan
                            Kaitan - 界探 - Realm searcher

                            Comment

                            • RobO
                              Member
                              • Jul 2023
                              • 51

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Jundo
                              This is why Zazen should be sat always with a trust, subtle yet deep in the bones, that Zazen is always a complete and self-fulfilling act, nothing lacking, nothing to add, always good. Zazen is a Buddha sitting in one's own sitting.

                              It is the opposite of our always judging mind, which strives for improvement, criticizes and feels lack.

                              You will find more about that here:

                              WHAT's OFTEN MISSING in SHIKANTAZA EXPLANATIONS ....
                              Dear All. I am writing a longer chapter for a book that points up some aspects of sitting Shikantaza that seem to be often missing, misunderstood or understated in many explanations I've read and heard regarding "how to" Shikanataza. In my belief, neglecting these points robs Shikantaza of its power, like fire


                              Gassho, J

                              stlah
                              Thank you Jundo 🙏

                              Gassho, Rob
                              Sat/lah

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