meditationman wrote: I'm starting to realize that meditation can be very well used to break from conditional attachments to live a fuller, more alive life. I feel that so many people today are merely living without being full alive, just going through the motions. Mindfulness is truly a lifestyle.
Indeed - this conditioning we have - habitual ignorant behaviours and unhealthy appetites that bring us so much unnecessary pain is most often hidden without mindfulness. Even if one practices for a time and then stops, the ignorance and appetites easily return.
Regarding observing one's thoughts, let's say one has a heart condition and loves eating greasy cookies. This has been one's vice and habit - one's condition - for so many years - it's automatic - one sees the cookie jar and one's body reflexively lurches towards it. One day one overdoses and has a heart attack and turns to mindfulness to correct the imbalance in one's appetites. Using this example to represent any conditioning a person has, as mindfulness practice deepens, one day one notices one has automatically and mindlessly taken a cookie into one's hand, and then out of self-compassion one decides to put it back in the jar. Next time, with mindfulness practice depeening further, one notices when one grabs the cookie jar. Then the next time one notices when one moves towards the jar, then the next time one notices when one notices the cookie jar, and suddenly one detects the thought "I need a cookie" upon spying the cookie jar. BOOM! (to quote rara
).
At this point, if one scans one's body and accepts the underlying 'emptiness' that the cookie will temporarily fill - smiling at it and soothing it with "It's OK, old friend carb-addict, I know you just want me to be comfortable", and reorienting oneself towards more 'noble' pursuits, such thoughts will be simply observed before they manifest as behaviours. A choice emerges - whether to indulge them or not. As Mark Williams says - the mind will often offer up unhealthy thoughts to you like a child holding out toys to a parent, and it is your call whether to play or not. Thoughts are our body's way of saying "Hey, have you considered this - it could solve a problem?". As you say; most people don't even recognise this part of their existence, and so most people just mindlessly and automatically play with whatever toy appears most attractive when it's made available to them.
The more we sit down and watch the landscape of our body-mind connection unfold, the more we get to know the territory and it's seasons - the watering holes, the sunny spots, the areas which tend to get polluted most easily, etc. With this deeper knowledge of one's internal territory, one cannot just plead ignorance when one's conscience - one's civilised, social dimension - kicks in - one automatically becomes proactive. Just by watching and noticing, everything unfolds in a more harmonious way. Easier said than done though!