Sunday, May 8, 2011

Living with monkey mind...

Living with monkey mind...
Today at the Unitarian Church here in Eureka Springs, we had a visit from 5 Tibetan monks traveling with the Dalai Lama. They chanted during our traditional Mother's Day Service, so between regular members and guests who had come just for the monks, the church was crowded. In a question and answer session in which attendees were able to ask one of the monks questions, he mentioned what has been called "monkey mind," the incessant interior mental chatter that most often revolves around the painful injuries we may feel we have sustained, or the hopes we may have of changing circumstances to elevate our own position in things, in life, and within our communities.... A great deal of monkey mind is plotting and scheming and taking us out of the moment.

A quick question of my readers... "Is the status of monkey mind alleviated or made worse by our technologies?" I suspect the answer is obvious. If students, and we ourselves cannot observe at least a few moments of silence, how can we learn things that are most truly meaningful?

This afternoon, I'm exercising my monkey mind by doing sketchup drawings for boxes to illustrate a Fine Woodworking Magazine article on the safe machining of small parts.

I am also working toward transcendence. Being in the woodshop with real wood is much easier and more fun.

Join me this day as I fall silent in my own quiet symphony of hands.
Make, fix and create...

2 comments:

Alex said...

I would say that technologies, especially television and internet, alleviate the monkey mind, as I find my whole self dissappears when watching, but, unfortunately, my monkey mind is then replaced with the technology's monkey mind(lessness) and there is still no quiet/peace/thought/introspection.

Doug Stowe said...

I think that technology displaces one's own monkey mind with one devised by someone else. You may not have the feelings of monkey mind or may feel less conscious of your own circling thoughts while engaged in technology, but we are learning that technology is no escape from monkey mind, but anchors it.