I realize
more and more that my thoughts sometimes behave like aimless, impulsive
wanderers. At certain times of the day, they stroll around in a desultory manner, messing around with one topic or another
for no noticeable reason. When I need to focus my thoughts, I can usually do it fairly well, but in a free moment (as when I’m fixing dinner, for instance)
my mind might go from planning something for the summer, to regretting a remark
I made yesterday, to wondering why my new neighbor across the street
is so silent when he sees me. Like some strange, shiftless person, my brain
occasionally seems to ramble around in a completely capricious manner. I’m not
worried about this, because it’s the way all minds sometimes work. What bothers
me, though, is that I occasionally fall into an old habit of getting carried
away by these undisciplined thoughts. Instead of standing back and
observing them as amusing but harmless mental imps, I sometimes get completely captured by this disorderly kind of thinking. I can spend many minutes
mindlessly swept away by my thoughts, and then “wake up” and wonder where the
time went. I guess what I need to learn is to simply stay detached
and unemotional about my own thoughts. After all, my thoughts aren’t “me”.
They’re simply short-lived phenomena, like the unfurling winds, like birds coasting by, and
the best approach to them would be simply observing and appreciating. Instead
of getting lost among the roving, often ragamuffin thoughts that come my way, I
should just sit back and be surprised by them.
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