Our sensory organs tell us that our body is solid and permanent. In reality, however, our body changes permanently, like the currents of a river.
Upon taking a breath, over 1.000.000.000. 000.000.000.000 atoms arrive into our body, they are incorporated
into our cells, and the same amount leaves our body when we breathe out. 98% of
the atoms of our body is replaced in a period shorter than a year: the liver is
completely renewed in 6 weeks, the skin in days, the bones are fully replaced
in 3 months, and the DNA is renewed in 6 weeks. The atoms of
your body as it existed a year ago are now all outside of your present body: in
the atmosphere, in the soil or incorporated into other living organisms, grass
and trees... that is how the entire planet recycles itself in a perpetual cycle.
We live in close interconnection and interaction with all other things,
everything is in the state of a constant change and transformation.
The only
permanent thing is change. We still tend to experience the permanence of our
Self.. Is it possible that we are not identical with our body?
In the Captivity of Thoughts
What are thoughts? The
philosopher Descartes announced that, ”I think, therefore I am!” This erroneous
assumption influences our identity even in the present day. Our thoughts, just
like the cells of our body, are constantly replaced with new ones; a thought
emerges and then vanishes, and new thoughts and ideas-associated with the
previous one-appear in a constant stream. Among the thoughts stream there is a small
gap, a little space. This space is the space of Consciousness, in which a
thought can appear.
We are proud
of being able to think. But are we really the ones who think? Are we really in
control of our thoughts, are we the ones who intend to think?
I invite you to carry out a simple, nonetheless astonishing experiment:
Take a watch or a stopwatch, and decide that you are not going to think for a while, as long as you are able to do so! Well, how long has it taken until the first thought slipped into your mind? 5-10 seconds? Are you able to avoid thinking for minutes?
Take a watch or a stopwatch, and decide that you are not going to think for a while, as long as you are able to do so! Well, how long has it taken until the first thought slipped into your mind? 5-10 seconds? Are you able to avoid thinking for minutes?
You will be astonished: you are incapable of not thinking.
Thinking takes place, it happens to you. The thoughts thinks you, and
it is not you who thinks it. You do not do it at will (if it depended it
on your will, you could simply avoid thinking), and you are unable to
suppress thinking or keep it under control.
It is not we who think, but the thoughts keep us under control with its
compelling force. It is the constant stream of thoughts that cover up the
existence of the Consciousness.
The
Pitfall of our Emotions
Emotions work in a similar
manner: they emerge and vanish in the space of the Consciousness.
Emotions, at the same time,
influence our lives to a large extent: they are able to generate lasting
addiction. Every emotion has its own neuropeptide, a type of hormone, which is
created by the brain and sent to our cells through the circulation of
blood. These peptides are very powerful chemicals, and if they keep bombarding
our cells for an extended period of time, they induce addiction. Once you have
become addicted, you will unconsciously strive to create situations in your
life in which you are able to satisfy your addiction. If you are, for instance,
an anger-addict, you will seek situations in which the ”anger-peptide”
addiction of your cells will be satisfied.
Our body is not constant, it
is continually renewed–we therefore cannot be identical with our body. Our
emotions and thoughts are not constant either. What we refer to as ”Self,” on
the other hand, exists permanently. The time has come to ask the question: if
we are identical neither with the constantly changing body nor with the
similarly changing thoughts and emotions, WHO WE REALLY ARE?
The Realm of the Ultimate Mystery: the Consciousness
By now,
science has studied the world down to the tiniest detail: the human body was
dissected, to organs and to cells, way down to the cell nucleus. But when the
parts of the body were put together again, only a lifeless puppet was
there–life somehow escaped in the course of dissection. We know everything
about the structure of the eyes of a common mouse, all that knowledge is there,
wrapped up in Latin terms, figures, statistics and equations. But the thing we
still know only very little of, and what is likely one of the last great
challenges for the science of the 21st century is Consciousness itself.
Two young fish are swimming
and they meet an elder fish. ”The water is very pleasant today, isn’t it?” the
elder fish greets them politely. The two young fish swim on, and after a while
one of them asks. ”Water? What is water?”
Consciousness is through and by
which we live and experience ourselves and the surrounding world. Since we
”swim” in it, we are unable to recognize it. Consciousness is the space itself
in which sensations, emotions and thoughts appear, and the mental image we
create of the world is projected into the immense space of the Consciousness.
Sensations, emotions and thoughts keep streaming into our Consciousness, and as
we focus on these contents, we ignore the space itself, which is the container
of the contents. This conscious space is
our ultimate Self.
(Excerpt from the book "Mindfulness Meditation - Journey into Consciousness" by Ervin K. Kery)
(Excerpt from the book "Mindfulness Meditation - Journey into Consciousness" by Ervin K. Kery)