How to Quiet Your Mind
Do you regularly feel at ease and at peace? Are you continuously overflowing with Joy and Bliss on a daily basis, such that you seem free of problems and emotional pain? If so, go directly to the comment section and share with us your secrets.
If you’re still reading, you are amongst the vast majority of us striving for a better life, yearning for a more peaceful and joyful existence. Yet, it seems like an impossible challenge, where we end up mentally punishing ourselves for failing, concluding that “I’m just not made to live in peace.”
You see, it’s not us, it’s just that we’ve become so easily distracted by the hurrying demands of modern life, that we’ve temporarily lost touch with our natural state of being. But there is a way, if we seek it.
The purpose of this article is to share a simple technique to bring more peace, joy and clarity into your life. Would you like that?
Why It’s Hard to Find Peace and Joy?
If you observe our problems, you will notice that most problems are rooted in the mind. The basic premise is the same: some external event happens, we choose to see only one side of the story, and then interpret the situation such that it causes some form of mental conflict, resulting in some form of emotional suffering.
While it is easy to simply say, “drop your problems”, you and I both know that it is not that simple. We all have had years and years of conditioning in attracting problems and conflicts. So much so, that the simple concept of ‘stop thinking about problems’ will not be so effective on us. We need tools that strike at the problem’s root.
Let’s now try something. Close your eyes for about a minute (or 5 minutes), and during this minute, send out the intention that you want silence and stillness, and you do not want to be pulled away from this silence by thoughts. (Pause your reading and go do this.)
Okay, so what happened? You probably noticed that the moment you become silent, thoughts started popping up – random and unrelated thoughts. These thoughts become a form of distraction, pulling us away from our inner silence.
This was only an experiment where we consciously observed our mind and tried to become still, but could not. Imagine the state of our inner space, while we are going about our day, unaware of the polluting in-coming thoughts.
As a result, our inner space becomes cluttered with useless information, with thoughts that are not conducive to our wellbeing, with garbage. Because our inner space is cluttered, our inner clarity and in-born wisdom becomes distant and foggy. And essentially, we loose touch with that part of our inner selves that is sacred, and wise, and peaceful, and eternal.
The distractions that we’ve declared as urgent and important, such as watching TV, updating our facebook and myspace and twitter pages, checking email, gossiping on the phone, loading mp3s on our music players, etc. all pull at us. They all pull at our attention, distracting us away from the things that are truly important to us – things that will bring lasting happiness and fulfillment to our lives and the lives of others we have yet to come to know.
Whether we recognize it or not, the information that we expose ourselves to, fills our inner space on some level, and affects our emotions and desires.
And if we are not careful, we can easily rush through life, while spending our precious time on this planet focused on that which does not matter – and then wonder where did my life go? Why do I feel unsettled and easily irritated? Why do I feel unfulfilled and incomplete? And then we die wondering.
If you are here, breathing and reading this right now, then you have been blessed with this day, to wake up! Wake up and take control of your destiny, starting with what you focus on and allow into your life (regardless of your age).
Simple Guide to a Deep Inner Cleanse
One way to clean out the clutter in our inner space is by guarding the garden of our mind. Being conscious of what we allow inside, starting with our own words, thoughts and attention.
We may not be aware of this, but we spend so much energy on gossiping, bad mouthing other people, judging other people, finding faults in others, and consumed in negative thoughts like jealousy, guilt or fear, and making excuses to cover up how we actually feel. I know all this sounds really bad and exaggerated when it’s all laid out like this. But if we truly observe ourselves, our thoughts and our words, we will notice that at some point of everyday, however subtly or unconsciously, we are doing several of these things.
I’m not pointing fingers, I can only speak from my own experience and confirm that this is true. Sometimes, the “violation” is subtle, like passing a negative judgment on a waiter at a restaurant, or becoming frustrated with a telephone customer service rep and wanting to call him a bad name, or making a little lie of an excuse instead of saying no.
It’s not that by having these thoughts or saying these words we become bad people. It’s just that these things become useless junk that clutters our inner space and does not contribute to our inner wellbeing.
Photo by Carlos Yepez (see him on flickr).
I had learned the following simple but incredibly effective technique from Swami Nithya Bhaktananda, spiritual counselor and direct disciple of Paramahamsa Nithyananda (Swamiji).
Follow these four rules to inner cleanse:
- Say what you mean. Mean what you say.
- Don’t say to anyone unless you can say to everyone.
- Don’t say inside, what you cannot say outside.
- Don’t say unless it is true, useful or kind.
I will expand on each rule in detail. If you want, you can print a wallet size of the 4 rules here: PDF | Word Doc
The 4 Rules to Quiet the Mind – Explained
1. Say what you mean. Mean what you say.
Part A: Say what you mean.
Have you found yourself making up excuses to avoid fully dealing with a potentially uncomfortable situation?
For example, your friend asks you to some social event. You don’t really want to go, but make up an excuse that “I can’t make it” or “I’m busy“, probably so you can quietly avoid something or someone or some activity.
Another example, someone asks you for a favor that you do not wish to comply to, but you feel guilty for rejecting him, so you either avoid that person (ie. Ignoring emails or phone calls), or create an excuse that isn’t really true (ie. I am out of town.)
It is not that you cannot do something, as your excuse suggests. The truth is that you have chosen not to do something, but the act of creating an excuse or avoiding it initiates a stir in your inner space, and it takes energy to maintain. Instead of stillness and peace, you are now holding onto and thinking about this little lingering “lie”.
When you are about to say anything, make a conscious decision to say the absolute truth, or what you actually mean. The absolute truth doesn’t have to be harsh or hurtful, you can do so compassionately and authentically, but firmly. When you own what you say, no one can reject it, even if they don’t like what they hear; because you are telling the truth and you mean it.
Part B: Mean what you say.
Sometimes we say things in passing out of obligation or habit that we don’t mean or intend on following through with. For example, we say, “I love you” to our parents or significant other when we hang up the phone, not because we mean it, but out of habit. The words comes so automatically now, that they start to lose their true meaning.
In another example, we will say, “I’ll call you soon“, “let’s chat soon“, or “I’ll call you tomorrow“. Or we offer to help, as parting words to a friend, and don’t intend on keeping that statement, but say it because it was easy and made the other person feel good.
We may think that these casual comments are harmless, but we know deep down that they are not true. They become little lies that we internalize, and over time they will develop into a guilty conscience that distracts you away from this moment.
Make a conscious commitment to yourself to mean everything that you say, and not to make empty promises that you cannot, will not, do not intend to fulfill.
2. Don’t say to anyone unless you can say to everyone.
Whether we admit to this or not, most of us love some form of gossiping (myself included). We are also quick to notice fault in others, and then talk about them with our trusted allies. Or we find out about someone’s misfortune and immediately we want to tell somebody.
I’m sure you can interject and include many examples from your life. But for sake of conversation, one example is: Jenny, at work, had an emotional fit and yelled at a co-worker today, and when we got home, we immediately told our spouse about the drama.
Another example, Pat was fired from his job, once we heard about it, we called or text-messaged our best friend Jane to tell her about it, or even exchange jokes about Pat, because we don’t like him.
In both examples, we cannot repeat the same things to everyone, especially Jenny or Pat. And if we really observed our inner space during and after we said these things, we wouldn’t feel very good in our stomach.
When we consciously observe such a conversation, we learn that we have accomplished nothing that feeds our soul. All we did was spread drama and created negative energy and inner conflict that polluted our inner space.
Make a commitment to yourself, that you will not say something to one person, unless you can announce it to the world, to everybody. Make a commitment to stop the spreading of drama and bad energy.
3. Don’t say inside, what you cannot say outside.
Most of us are extremely critical of ourselves. Because we would never tell the world what we say to ourselves, in the privacy of our mind, we believe that we are the only ones affected by negative self-talk, low self-esteem, and anxiety.
When something doesn’t go perfectly, we are first to blame ourselves, criticizing what we did wrong, what we didn’t do perfect enough, what we missed.
We all have inner chattering, but problems arise when we start to believe in our inner chattering, such that false beliefs about ourselves are formed. These false beliefs become detrimental to our spirits and future wellbeing, unless we do something to unlearn these beliefs.
Next time, you hear the voice in your head say “I’m stupid” or “I’m not good enough” or “I am a failure” or other related self-defeating thoughts, recognize that it is not you. You could verbally say, “That’s not me! That’s not true!” and even declare the following to this thought,
“From today forward, I choose to let you go, for you are no longer serving me. I am exposing you, for you are not real! From today onward, I am free from you.”
The basic premise of the third rule to inner cleanse is that, whatever thought you are not able to say out aloud to people (anyone), don’t even bother entertaining inside your head. Keep your inner space clean.
4. Don’t say unless it is true, useful or kind.
Some people have so much inner chatter that it spills out of them in the form of useless speech.
Observe the people who talk on buses, or love to chitchat at work by the water fountain. If you observe and count the number of things they say that are actually useful or truly interesting, it would be a low number.
Not only is this distracting for those around this person, it takes an enormous amount of energy for this person to keep talking. Recall the last time you talked for a long time about something random, and how drained you felt afterwards. Plus, the more useless things we say, the more useless things we feed back into our head.
If you feel that I’ve described you, don’t feel discouraged. I’ve been there too, and can contest that it is possible to quiet down.
Some people practice sabbatical days where they don’t speak at all, or read, or use the computer. And at the end of such a day, they feel a tremendous sense of peace, space and energy bubbling inside them.
Be conscious of what you say and only say it if any of the following is true:
Is what I’m saying …
- True to me? An authentic statement from my heart?
- Useful or helpful to someone or some situation?
- Kind or compassionate? Such as a compliment, or an offer of help?
Parting Words: On Quieting The Mind
This post was born out of 4 simple sentences someone gave me a few months ago. After practicing it in my own life, I’ve come to the conclusion that if you give this simple 4-line guidance a try for 21 days, you will notice a beautiful inner transformation – from noise to stillness, from chaos to clarity.
It may seem difficult at first, but do it consistently and consciously for 3 days and it becomes much easier after that. Extend it to 7 days, and then to 21 days. Please do not kick yourself for slipping on the rules, it happens, let it go.
After some time, observe how your outer world changes, as your inner world is transformed. Please come back and share with us.
One more thing: Let your heart guide you. Trust it, and listen to it.
(Again, you can print a wallet size of the 4 rules here: PDF | Doc)
Editor’s Note: Speaking of slipping the rules, while Jeremy was editing this article, he stopped at one point, to colorfully curse out the upstairs neighbor for making loud bizarre noises. Then we both looked at each other and laughed at the irony. Another lesson learned.
* Share your thoughts and story with us in the comment section.
See you there!
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Very nice post, great writing ability!
Dear Tina,
I’ve forgotten how I clicked my way to you, but I felt a surge of joy when I read about you wherever. Yay!
I didn’t read your rules because I’ve found my own way and I’d like to share that too. It was through finding my inner clown and living it. Patch Adams, The Power of Now, The Celestine Prophecy, The Tao of Poo, The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying and my friend Al are just a few books and people who helped me along the way. It has been about short magical moments of connection, of knowing and learning and wow, seeing/ reading you here and knowing the world is good as it is and changing all the time. Thanks and bless you!
Im directly jumping to comments after reading the first paragraph. My life has been so joyful and easy because I am outspoken and try to be logical. I keep nothing in my heart which irks me. People around me felt uneasy in the beginning but now they are going along well.
PS: Life becomes a lot easier if you are able to differentiate between other people’s fact and opinion. Dont contradict facts and learn to respect opinion.
I admired people who can always mean what s/he say and say what s/he means. Doing and saying are two different things. Most of the time, people prefer saying instead of doing or practicing. I myself believe practicing is more practical and useful to help us move forward.
Thanks for the pointers, they are useful!
For Hamid.
I find it very very interesting that you 1. jumped right to the comments, 2. you say ” you keep nothing in your heart that irks you”. My understanding of the practise Tina says above, is that through mindful action and speech, one reaches a place where very few things ‘irks their hearts’. Hence on is not troubled by outside events/people and hence doesn’t need to vent. Hence by practising the points above, frustuations, troubles at others tend to dissipate as we reach a place of peace within ourselves. Basically the expression of negativity and negative opinion is reduced. Negativity is usually our ego’s need to be right and dominant, or our self doubts asserting themselves. However with mindful action and speech, one learns to be aware of this and hopefully control it or watch it fall away.
So there is compassion for all things and people.
You must elucidate as to how you are joyful at all times. Do you have tremendous inner peace. If so how?
Tina, ditto on what you said regarding turning to facebook/twitter/etc daily activities as an escape route vs. facing our problems. I realize many people consciously/unconsciously use these as convenient ways to avoid dealing with what we have on hand. It’s important to be aware when it happens and handle them accordingly. There’s many people may be physically old but remain emotionally undeveloped because they have never tried to develop themselves mentally/emotionally before. I wrote an article on escapism a month back, inspired by some experiences with some of my coachees (http://embraceliving.net/blog/2009/05/what-are-you-running-away-from/). The gist of the article was there’s no point in running away because we ultimately need to deal with what we are trying to escape from.
You’re kidding, right?
I agree that gossip is usually bad. I shy away from it myself. But “not saying to anyone anything you’d not say to everyone” is grossly overstated and just plain silly. Think about it. Good friends are precisely those people we can trust and talk with freely. We avoid saying certain things to acquaintances. And workmates, well, they’re another ball game altogether. Adopting your principle would essentially wipe out the public/private distinction and eviscerate the notion of friendship.
You know, your post should really have been entitled “4 easy steps to an internalized police state.”
Happy monkey! ;-)
FOR UZMA,
My friends and colleagues say that Im alway happy and thats how I feel about me mostly. I have inner peace because
1) Im able to differentiate between people’s opinions and facts and I treat them accordingly.
2) Im assertive but present my thoughts as my soft opinion, giving the listener an opportunity to disagree with them.
3) I get tremendous pleasure from little joys of life. A pleasant incident in morning gives me kicks whole day long.
4) And I pay little or no heed to what people say.
Thats how i keep my inner peace. Hope I made myself clear.
Hi — I just found your blog, and this article couldn’t have come at a better time! Thanks!
I have peace and joy in my life in great abundance! I received it through the grace and hope I found in God the father, his son Jesus, and the Holy Spirit who quiets me and guides me every day. The godhead three in one, changes me as I worship. I feel cleansed of my wrongdoings, I feel hope for an eternal future, and I feel able to live with power over myself. My abundant hope leads to peace and joy which cancels out everything else. I can fully appreciate the pain in my life more than most people I know, and even when I’m experiencing the deepest pains and can feel no happiness, my hope in the Lord gives me great joy. Joy is not happiness, it is something which never goes away, and I can have it even when I suffer. My hope gives me joy and even peace when I suffer, and gets me back on my feet so I can feel happiness and the good times again.
Thats nice of you Hamid. Thank you for sharing. Very nice of you to do so. You’re so right on many counts. Indeed if one enjoys the small things in life , life does become peaceful.
Thanks again for sharing.
God bless
Great post! Thanks for elaborating on a theory I’ve used in my life on everything from my business to my recreation. This should be required weekly reading.
I always take a moment after yoga to just lay there and meditate for about 10 minutes. No better time investment to get your body and mind relaxed and stronger.
TIna-
i jumped straight to the comments page and began to write how i ”regularly feel at ease and at peace.. continuously overflowing with Joy and Bliss on a daily basis, such that you seem free of problems and emotional pain…” but of course read your material once i wrote my reply. Truth be told i erased it because incorporated much of what you had written in this post. I thoroughly enjoyed the read and agree with message you emit.
I found this on a pendant long ago and it has always helped to remind me in moments of losing the path as we all will at certain times in life due to the disease of excessive thinking,
Five Simple Rules For Happiness
1. Free your mind from hatred
2. Free your mind from worries
3. Live Simply
4. Give More
5. Expect Less
it is those who remember how to keep your mind free and your soul peaceful that reach a state of enlightenment :)
Be here now, appreciating the past and the present, and viewing the future as an adventure.
Continue spreading the happiness around you as you all ready are.
I prioritize what is important to me and my spiritual goals in life and cancel the rest, everything else is irrelivant. Thats how I keep my peace of mind.
Your observations, real life examples, and suggestions are so appreciated. Reading your comments, hearing your successes and struggles, helps myself and others through times of strength and weakness.
Please keep sharing your stories and updates.
Lisa
Wow this blog was very helpful. I struggle everyday trying to clear my mind. This leads to my insomnia. I’ve been reading books about it and everything. very insightful post. thanks!
Great post Tina!
But be careful with this one:
Say what you mean. Mean what you say.
I think it’s a bit dangerous to believe that saying precisely what we mean will help us to get rid of guilt.
Let’s imagine someone is asking for a favor and that we don’t want to do it.
We can stop there. Here’s the source of the guilt. No matter what we say or do beyond this point we will feel guilty for not wanting to help out.
Saying exactly what we mean will not help, because what we would really try to convey is that this person is not important to us. This is the real reason. It will do even more damage.
The purpose of the white lie “I’m just too busy” is actually to avoid making this person feel unimportant. IMO this is being considerate.
Your point is still important though because we mustn’t mistake our white lies for the truth. If we do that we lose the ability to deal with our guilt.
Because then we might say to ourselves that “it’s okay because I had so many important things to do.” But our brains will never accept that because it knows it’s not true. Plus it will punish us for lying to it by adding some more guilt. The bastard.
Avoidance, not answering emails and so on, is a direct consequence of not dealing with guilt.
The way to deal with it is to face it. To spell out the truth to yourself. In this case “this person wasn’t important enough for me to help, so I didn’t”, and then to practice self-forgiveness. We didn’t mean to do harm so it’s okay. Then let it go.
There’s a social angle here too. When someone asks us if we like their sweater, and we absolutely hate it, we can’t really say “No, I think it’s hideous.”
That wouldn’t be considerate, because what this person is really saying is “Please tell me you like my sweater.” Our opinions is not the point.
Even the sweater is beside the point. It’s rather “Please tell me you accept me the way I am”.
If we’re unable to say “I do accept you the way you are” (“Hey, you look great!”) then we are also unable to accept ourselves. The mind that thinks “that person looks hideous” will soon think “I look hideous”. The hand that points outwards also points inwards.
Okay, thanks for reading and thanks for sharing!
Great blog. I enjoyed it. All the best.
The first paragraph had me giggling. I cant think of anyone like that :D you are right, we can easily get overwhelmed by the hustle and bustle of life, especially in today’s society. Its hard to stop thinking about all of the problems. You are right we do spend a lot of our time engaged in activity that is not going to fulfill us. Yes we are too critical of ourselves. I haven’t met a single person who isn’t worried about how they are looking etc or what others are thinking. These are definitely some great tips.