Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 467: Five Ways to be Less Distracted | Shaila Catherine
Episode Date: June 29, 2022One of the most common and insidious complaints of meditators is distraction, which can be a frustrating and difficult obstacle. Even the Buddha himself acknowledged this common problem and l...aid out some detailed practices for dealing with it. In this episode, Shaila Catherine outlines the Buddha’s five strategies to help us tackle distractions, which can be applied to our meditation practice as well as other aspects of our lives.Catherine is a dharma teacher whose latest book is called Beyond Distraction: Five Practical Ways to Focus the Mind. She is also the founder and principal teacher at Insight Meditation South Bay and has 40 years of practice, including nine years, cumulatively, of silent retreat. Her first TPH appearance, which we called How to Focus, aired in May 2021. In this episode we talk about: The Buddha’s struggles with distractionShaila’s attempts to make the teachings of the Buddha accessible to contemporary mindsThe importance of getting to know your own thought patternsThe counterintuitive strategy of “avoid it, ignore it, forget it”Replacing seduction with mindfulnessDeveloping a flexibility of mindWhy we’re vulnerable to our own tendencies when we’re not mindfulFull Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/shaila-catherine-467See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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This is the 10% happier podcast.
I'm Dan Harris.
Hello, my fellow suffering beings today.
We're going to talk about one of the most common and most insidious complaints of meditators,
both new meditators and experienced meditators.
Distraction.
I cannot tell you how often people come up to me
and say that they want to meditate,
but they're bad at it because their mind is all over the place.
You might have heard me use this term before,
but I often call this line of argument
the fallacy of uniqueness.
People seem to believe that they have a sort of bespoke
lunacy, that only their mind is chaotic and cacophonous.
But this is just a human condition.
You can blame evolution for this situation.
We're wired to have racing minds
that are constantly on the lookout
for threats, food, and mates.
In any event, I'm not here to argue
that distraction isn't real.
It's very real, of course,
and it can be super frustrating
and difficult, especially in meditation.
It's such a common problem, in fact,
that the Buddha himself laid out some detailed practices
for dealing with it.
And today, we're going to talk to a master meditator
about five strategies straight from the Buddha.
And these tips are good not only for meditation,
but for the rest of your life
where for many of us distraction is also a massive issue.
Shaila Catherine is a Dharma teacher whose latest book is called Beyond Distraction,
five practical ways to focus the mind.
She is the founder and principal teacher of Insight Meditation South Bay.
She has 40 years of meditation practice, including nine years cumulatively of silent retreat
practice under her belt. Just by way of context,
Shilas first TPH appearance, which we called how to focus, was back in May of 2021, that conversation
was based on her writings on the subject of concentration. This conversation is about the highly
related subject of distraction. We reran Shilas first episode back in April and we paired it with an
episode with the writer Johann Hari, which we called Why You Can't Pay Attention and How To Think
Deeply Again. And today's episode fits, of course, very nicely in the context of these two
previous interviews. So if you're looking to go deep on the subject of distraction and get some
practical advice, we've put links to those previous episodes in the show notes of today's episode. To be clear, you don't have to listen to
those before you listen to this one. This one is evergreen and freestanding. And in this conversation,
we talk about the Buddha's struggles with distraction. Shilas attempts to make the teachings of the
Buddha accessible to contemporary minds. The importance of getting to know your own thought patterns, the counterintuitive strategy of avoid it,
ignore it, forget it, replacing seduction with mindfulness, developing a flexibility of
mind, and why we are vulnerable to our tendencies when we're not mindful.
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Okay on with the show.
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Shiloh Catherine, welcome back to the show. Thank you. It's great to be back.
Let's start on a kind of definitional tip here. The last time you were on the show, you talked about concentration in meditation,
ability to focus, following up on your two prior books on concentration. You've gone on to write a
new book about distraction. Obviously, I know you believe these subjects are related, but how are
they also distinct? Well, that's a great question. I think people are surprised that I write a book on distraction after writing the more advanced
deeper books on deep concentration and deliberating insights.
You think that would be the culmination of one's work.
But they're very distinct in the sense that there are certain hindrances, certain obstructions that prevent one from
deepening one's concentration and realizing deep and freeing insight. And that's primarily
the restless mind. It's having a mind that just doesn't cooperate with our intentions.
And as one deepens in one's meditation, we have periods where the mind really does cooperate
as our samadhi is getting deep as our concentration
is clarifying, but we also become more sensitive
to the obstacles and have a lot of respect
for those obstacles that persist.
And I believe that it's the restlessness,
it's the distracted thinking,
it's the habits of continuing to reach
for various stimulation for sometimes
what seems like almost no reason at all,
just conditioning or just a little trigger for an experience,
something kind of like that.
I don't know why, maybe, in live in the day
and yet the consequences very often
are quite detrimental to what we really value
about cultivating the mind. So I came to appreciate the, you could say, the hinderence is a lot more
as my practice deepened and as I continued to work with students who were wanting to develop
samadhi. So this current book beyond distraction is really about that. It's about focusing on distraction so that we can move beyond it.
Like, really looking at the forces that continue to distract us and
to develop practical strategies for overcoming restless thinking,
room and nation, chronic worry, you know,
anxious thoughts, those sorts of things.
Now, that's slightly different than my first book, which know, anxious thoughts, those sorts of things. Now that's slightly different than
my first book, which is focused and fearless, and that introduces the practices of concentration,
how to stabilize the mind, how to develop conditions that are conducive for concentration.
And yes, overcoming distraction is one chapter in that book, But I felt like I needed to go further with that one chapter.
So it was like I took that chapter and expanded it
into a whole book for this third book.
The first book focused in fearless,
not only introduces concentration and provides exercises
for anyone to develop and strengthen their capacity to focus,
but it also introduces the four absorption states called
Jhana, where the mind gets deeply concentrated and unified in meditation. It introduces the four
formless attainments, where one takes as the object, infinite space, and infinite consciousness. So
that's kind of far out. And it introduces the relationship between concentration and insight.
But then my second book, Wisdom, Wind, and Deep, that presents a complete path and a comprehensive
path of deepening samadhi and concentration and understanding the conditionality of body and mind
conditionality of body and mind and exploring insight practice. But from the perspective of my teacher, Paoak Sayodau, who presents a very detailed, very systematic approach that comes, it's like
walking through the ancient meditation manual called the Vasudimaga. So my first book is a great introduction to deep
and in concentration and meditation. My second book is really an advanced book for
people who want to look at details and I do mean details. It gets pretty
pretty detailed and it's big and this third book is much lighter, more accessible to readers.
So I would recommend if anybody wanted to read my work, start with the third one, then
go to the first one.
The interesting thing, or at least an interesting thing about distraction to my mind, is that
a major barrier for many people is what I call the fallacy of uniqueness.
I hear from people, oh, I can't meditate because my mind is uniquely distractible and flitting
all over the place.
But you make the point in your book and your new book that even the Buddha, if you believe
the ancient Buddhist scriptures or texts, even the Buddha pre-enlightenment was noticing
that his mind was all over the place.
Yeah, I think that's very believable to me.
I don't think it was kind of false humility that he was saying, oh, yeah, that happened
to me, too.
I think he genuinely did the work to awaken, which meant he had to recognize and work skillfully
with the very same hindrances that all minds have.
Do you have a sense of why? I guess this is a question I get all the time. Why do we have these
racing minds? Yeah, I don't know. I mean, sometimes I like to say, well, I see and ears hear so minds think
that it's kind of what that function does.
The problem actually though,
isn't that we're able to think
because really life would be a lot worse
if we couldn't think.
The problem is, is that our thoughts very often
link up with, it's gonna sound very pejorative, but it is, it's
defilements. So we're thinking in a way that is infested with greed, or we're thinking in a way
that is biased by anger, or we're thinking in a way that keeps putting selfishness at the center.
selfishness at the center. And so we keep getting caught in those,
in greed, hate, and delusion basically,
in Buddhist terms, the three poisons.
And our thoughts keep reinforcing those poisons,
and then the poisons keep reinforcing the thoughts.
So there isn't a problem with being able to think.
In fact, it's really important that we learned
to reflect deeply, that we learned to think clearly,
that we can analyze fairly, that we can understand
with wisdom and clear discernment what's actually happening.
But can we take the defilements out,
the greed, hate, and delusion, and not let that
determine the nature of our thoughts,
the direction of our thoughts, the character of our thoughts.
Well said. In your new book, you run through five strategies for dealing with distraction.
If it's okay with you, I'd love to take a tour, a spin through these now.
Great. Let's go on the journey. I love these strategies, and I'm one who loves lists.
So it's nice to have a handy, dandy little list
of five things to try.
Sometimes people feel like, oh, I'm in that rut again,
I can't do anything about it.
Well, why don't you try Strategy One and then Strategy Two,
and if it doesn't work, go to strategy three.
There are things that we can do to alter our patterns
to change our habits and to shift those tendencies of mind.
And so I like the practicality of it.
And I like that it's just a list of five.
I can remember that many.
And this is a list that comes right out
of the aforementioned Buddhist scriptures. Yes, it's in the middle-linked discourses.
I wrote the book based upon a discourse number 19 and 20.
And the list of five is in a discourse called the removal of distracting thoughts, which
is middle-linked discourses number 20 in the Polycanon.
So it's very accessible. People can go to the original source and make their own interpretations of how to understand those strategies as well.
I include the sutras, a translation of the sutras in the book, so people have the primary source. Because that's something I love to do in my own practice. I love the discourses of the Buddha. I like getting that inspiration.
Then I contemplate, how is this accessible and applicable to me now? More than 2,600 years
after the Buddha's life, we still have minds. We struggle with the same basic tendencies.
But how does it apply to contemporary life with the kinds of things that I struggle with.
And time and again, I keep finding that the Buddhist advice is still good.
It still works.
Sometimes we have to make a few tweaks, like if he's talking about a chariot,
we might have to shift to our automobile in our minds.
In these discourses, he might use similes that might not always address
our daily lives. But there's something that's close by that we can interpret it with. And then we
get a sense of practicing what the Buddha really taught, what he was teaching somebody else. And I
imagine that he taught a discourse like this because somebody came to him and said, oh, dear Buddha, my mind is torturing me.
I keep thinking this and that.
What can I do about it?
And he says, we'll try this and try this and try this and try this and finally try that.
Quick side note here, Shaile used the term Suta's.
That is the ancient term from the poly language. That is in Sanskrit,
you might say sutras, which is basically just another way of saying the Buddhist texts or
scriptures. Anyway, having gotten that out of the way, let's talk about these five strategies.
The first is to replace unwholesome thoughts with wholesome thoughts. Say more, please.
I know. It sounds, in a way, it sounds kind of obvious. If your mind is thinking
thoughts of hate then change those to something else, maybe thoughts of loving kindness. If there's
somebody that you really resent to the point that when you think about them all you can think about
are the things that you resent, then really try to see something
that you respect about them or that you're grateful for.
If you have thoughts that are keeping you awake at night, having thoughts of, oh, I'm
not going to be able to accomplish this, I'm not good enough, I can't meet this goal,
people will think I'm a fraud, then replace those thoughts, think a different thought like
it'll be okay,
or something that produces a sense of confidence or trust in your capacity just to do your best.
First, we have to see that there is a tendency or a habit, kind of like a groove in the mind.
That keeps taking us down a thought that is maybe affected by greed, hate or delusion or affected by some
defilement or is reinforcing an unwholesome state. And we see that those
thoughts that we're thinking keep feeding that unwholesome state. So we try to
do something. And one of the first things we can do is just change the thought.
And the surprising thing is, is that often is enough. It often just shifts the energy
so that that can help get us out of that groove in the mind. So are you talking here in this first
strategy? Are you talking about when you get distracted during meditation or when you're, you know,
trying to fall asleep? Oh, well, I use this strategy anytime. There's an unwholesome thought in the mind.
Anytime, anytime, inactivity, in conversation,
any waking up, going to sleep, and in meditation.
This kind of just raises a whole set of issues for me
or creates some confusion that perhaps you can help me alleviate.
So I thought when in meditation,
and I completely understand
how the strategy would be useful for free range mindfulness, you know, or out in our day-to-day
lives. But when you're in meditation, I thought, okay, the goal is to notice a thought or an
urge or an impulse or an emotion arise. But you don't have to do anything about it other
than see it, hopefully, with a little bit of warmth. But now I'm hearing you say, actually, no, maybe add in some thinking to counter program
against whatever unholsomness your mind has just vomited up.
I think it's an option to add an additional intention there and shift the pattern of your
mind.
Being mindful of a thought and recognizing, oh, the mind is thinking now and that's an
angry thought or that's a hateful, or that's a hateful thought,
or that's a fearful thought, or whatever the thought might be. That actually, in itself, has already
done a kind of replacing, in the sense that it is replaced being seduced into the thought,
to now the mindfulness and discernment that recognizes there's thinking happening. So we're no longer seduced into the content we're seeing the process. And we've had the first
really clear insight that a thought is just a thought. That already actually
has replaced the seduction with mindfulness. In some practices we just watch
that and when we're not feeding a thought, it dissipates
anyway.
So some approaches to mindfulness will have us just do exactly what you said, and it
will work.
We'll see the thought and we won't feed it anymore so it will change on its own.
But there are sometimes a deep conditioning, a repeated pattern, a thought that keeps
coming back, and we might want to do more.
We might want to bring in something more than mindfulness.
We might want to bring in some discernment, some energy, some investigation, some contemplation,
some reflection, and we might want to actively make a different choice to occupy the mind
with something else.
And there are times when we need to shift it,
and we're developing this flexibility of mind,
this capacity to shift,
and we're convincing ourselves very clearly
that we're not stuck in that pattern,
because as soon as we shift out of it,
we know we aren't stuck in it.
In meditation, sometimes we do just as you said,
we see it, and then it naturally ends or fades,
and that's enough. We don't
have to do anything else. Some mindfulness practices encourage one to see that one is thinking,
to know that that's thinking, and then to redirect your attention to something more tangible
in the present moment, maybe the sensations of the body sitting or breathing, maybe hearing
a sound appear and disappear and help ground the attention in the body sitting or breathing, maybe hearing a sound appear and disappear
and help ground the attention on the present moment.
So this is another approach.
Now in this particular discourse, the language of it does seem to imply that the meditator
is replacing an unwholesome thought with a wholesome one.
But nevertheless, I feel that what we're talking about in terms of seeing a thought as a thought
rather than being seduced in the content,
or shifting from the preoccupation with thinking
to now directing the attention to the body sitting and breathing.
I feel like it's in the same range of this strategy.
It's still accomplishing the same purpose.
It's shifting from one pattern that's unwholesome,
which if we continued it would deepen that groove
and that habit, and it's shifting into a more useful one,
grounding in the present moment,
allowing things to come and go.
So even if we're not picking up
an explicit, discursive thought,
we're still bringing in some thought of wisdom
or understanding. And so I put that
in the same category. I just wanted to share just the simile that the booty uses. And he uses
the simile of a carpenter who wants to remove a peg from a block of wood. And he takes a smaller peg
and pounds on the smaller peg, which dislodges the larger
peg, which falls through the block of wood.
But the smaller peg doesn't get stuck in the wood because it's smaller.
So in the same way, we are using thought and our capacity to think whether it's a whole
discursive thought of loving kindness or of equality that we appreciate
about somebody to dislodge of an angry view.
Or it's simply the thought of shifting attention to the body sitting and breathing.
Or recognizing this is just a thought.
It's taking a much smaller thought that we're not going to get caught by.
We're not going to get stuck in. That's a really useful similarly. I mean, I am as far from a carpenter as you can find.
I'm the least handy person in the world, but I get it and I can see exactly how I could
use it. Can you say a little bit more about how you use it either on the cushion or off
this strategy that is? So you might be talking to somebody and thinking, oh, this is literally the most
boring person I've ever encountered. And you can just drop in one little thought that knocks
out the larger peg. And what would that thought look like?
Oh, it's, I think it's helpful for people to actually recognize what their patterns are.
And if there's a judgmental thought about somebody being boring, you know, already pre-right
a few alternatives because we know our patterns, we know, are ready pre-write a few alternatives,
because we know our patterns,
we know our little nasty thoughts.
They're very rarely unique.
They're usually the same ones that we apply
to a whole bunch of different people.
So everybody first has to get to know their own patterns
and then develop some alternatives,
because we've already thought that thought,
we don't need to keep
thinking it. And it doesn't really help us or them. So I might replace it if I thought, oh, this
person is really boring. I might actually try to understand their perspective about something. What
are they finding interesting in the subject that I find so boring. Or I might look at my impatience
because whenever I'm bored,
I'm impatient.
I think something else should be happening.
I'm not actually present.
So I shift it back to inquire,
why am I disconnected and judgmental in this situation?
Or I might just shift to loving kindness.
Just a thought of loving kindness.
This is a human being who is presenting
themselves in the way that they're presenting themselves. They have joys, they have sorrows,
they have suffering. Let me just be present for the humanness of them. Instead of the
degree of fascination I might have with the content of what they're talking about, or
their style of speech, or whatever it is I'm judging them for.
Just connect heart to heart moment to moment in that encounter with the person.
So all of these, they develop that flexibility where we shift.
We see that there's something that's not helpful that's arising within my own mind
and I'm making a shift to some alternative.
I'm looking. Is there another way to see this? Is there another way to meet this?
For anybody who's new to the show and hasn't heard the term loving kindness, the ancient word for that is META, which you can also translate into the less
also translate into the less grand concept of just friendliness, which I actually prefer. And what I'm hearing you say there is you don't have to have a fully formed sentence in
the mind, perhaps, that you're using to replace whatever nasty little thought to use your phrase
has arisen.
It can just be this kind of wordless impulse toward basic good will when we're in a conversation or if we're
facing somebody or something where we're having the opposite ill will. Certainly yes. I don't think
it has to be an articulated sentence in the mind, but it can be, especially for patterns that
we repeat all the time, to have a clear intention to shift to. But I would say probably most of the time
it's not a full sentence or a fully formed thought. It's just a kind of wordless shift in my own
encounter with the experience. So towards love and kindness, sometimes I just feel like there's a
kind of contraction into like me and my territory, me and my thoughts,
me and how I think things should be.
And there's a softening.
I can shift to a softening that just opens and receives that.
And that also is a shift that I would put generally in this strategy of replacing.
We're recognizing a problem and we're asking, is there another way to be in this strategy of replacing, we're recognizing a problem and we're asking,
is there another way to be in this? Is there another more useful, more wholesome, more helpful way
of encountering this? And we're allowing that shift to happen. We're doing something in the way
that we meet our own patterns of mind so that we stop reinforcing the habit.
own patterns of mind so that we stop reinforcing the habit. Let me run by you a strategy that I have found supercharges strategy you're advancing here,
which is to tune in to how good it feels when whatever greed or hatred, whatever variety
of greed or hatred has had you in its grip.
Whenever it ends, how good it feels when it has passed.
Just as a quick example, last night my wife
and I went to see a concert, it was great.
We're really enjoying it.
And at some point, for reasons that I don't fully understand,
I just got carried away with a several songs worth of rage,
about something completely disconnected from the concert. I was just thinking
about something that's happening in my life and I just fully went there and I started thinking,
let's just go. I'm tired, let's just leave. And no mindfulness was mustard during this time.
It was only later when I woke up and realized, oh, I'm not feeling this anymore and I saw just what
a vast relief that was. And then the mindfulness came in like,
oh yeah, that was just a temporary mine state. It doesn't need to blood out the sun. Anyway,
I raised this because I feel like for me, there's tuning into that relief. You can sometimes use
that when you're caught to jar you out of it because you already know once I see this as temporary
and not a juggernaut,
there's nothing I can do anything about.
It can be a useful tool to interrupt.
Anyway, I'm rambling here, but does that make any sense to you?
It makes a lot of sense, but I would tend to put that more in the second strategy.
I've jumped ahead.
Well, what is the second strategy?
You've jumped ahead?
Yes, yes, yes.
These aren't hard and fast.
Like I said, somebody can read the discourses and read these strategies and kind of place them maybe and interpret them maybe slightly different than I do.
But they're nevertheless, I think, is a progression. And I think that slides into the second strategy, which is described as examining the danger in those thoughts. And we pick up the second strategy
usually when we've tried the first one and it hasn't worked, we're still
obsessed by it, we're still caught by it. And so we then realized, well, what is
the danger here? Where is this leading? And you know, you were recognizing not
only did you miss some of the concert
because of the obsession with those thoughts, but it made you want to leave.
It made you want to take action and do things based upon that anger.
And actually, you were probably sitting in a fairly comfortable seat and you could have been enjoying yourself.
So even in a situation like that, there are certain dangers where we're
not seeing the situation clearly. We're missing the present moment. We're reinforcing anger
and hate. It could lead to speaking or acting based upon the hindrance or the defilement,
which it's usually better to act on wisdom than on anger and hate. So we can recognize and contemplate those dangers.
We can also see that we're doing on something and sometimes we do on things a lot longer
than the actual situation is.
So we're perpetuating it.
So when we contemplate the danger, we start to see all the unwanted consequences of that habit.
And it builds the desire and the dispassion to get free of it.
So it helps us want to let it go.
It helps us want to shift out of it.
And the Buddha often talked about seeing the gratification,
the danger, and the escape,
this three-part investigation or understanding.
So this discourse emphasizes the
danger. But to me, they're linked. We are perpetuating that habit, that
pattern in this case of ruminating on something that stimulates anger. What
are we getting out of it? And what did you feel like you were getting anything
out of it? Was it stimulating something?
Plans for revenge.
Sure.
Yes, but why would you want to pay for a concert ticket
and then sit in that seat, planning revenge?
There are other things we seem to get out of plans for revenge.
Sometimes it builds an essence of energy and stimulation
like we feel really alive.
Sometimes it entertains us if the concert wasn't particularly exciting.
Or sometimes it builds a sense of self,
where we can feel stronger or we can feel more confident
because we're angry.
Sometimes we seem to get something out of even painful states.
There's a reward in there sometimes.
And seeing the danger to me implies that we
need to see the reward and recognize that's really not that rewarding. It's a deceptive
reward. In order to see the danger though, don't you need to see that you're caught? I mean,
as I mentioned, I spent several songs. My apologies to the band
who was playing the strokes. Love the strokes. Shout out to them. But I spent several of their
excellent songs completely distracted. And I didn't know I was distracted. So how would I have
been able to muster thoughts about the dangers if I was just completely caught? In the moment,
if you're completely caught, you can't do anything. These strategies, you can
only apply when there's already been enough recognition to realize that you're lost in thought.
So there are big chunks of time you're saying a couple of songs worth. When all we have to do is
say, oh, well, just miss that, because you can't do anything if you're totally lost. But there
does come a time when you reconnect
with the present moment for whatever reason,
and that's the moment when you can consider
these strategies.
I also think they're useful to apply even hours later
so that we build our understanding of it
because this contemplation of the dangers
builds a dispassion for that pattern.
It allows us to let go more easily in the future.
It allows us to see that that groove seems deep.
It's deep because we think we're getting something from it
and we're not.
And sometimes we have to see the danger of the pattern
many times kind of in reflection after we've gotten caught in order to want to
do something different.
So it's interesting just to play this through then.
I actually told actually I made everything worse because I beat myself up for having been
lost for a couple of songs, but perhaps if I'm hearing you correctly, a more constructive
way to approach it would have been, or one possible, more constructive approach would have been to reflect skillfully on, huh, I was lost in anger there about a situation where I was
clearly getting some energy from my anger.
That was the little, not very rewarding reward that I was chasing.
But maybe it's worth thinking about how I am way less likely to achieve a positive outcome
to the situation about which I was perseverating if I'm acting out of the anger that had caught me
as opposed to seeing that anger as a temporary state that doesn't need to own me and
govern my actions going forward. That sounds very wise to me, and there's no need to beat ourselves
up about it. It's really a wise reflection.
And it can be humbling, not in a false way, in a real genuine way.
It can actually inspire us to want to practice more mindfulness because we can see that we're
vulnerable when we're not mindful.
We're vulnerable to our own tendencies.
Coming up, Shaila Catherine, on when to deploy the counter-intuitive strategy of avoid it,
ignore it, forget it, how and why to get over ourselves and the opposite of clinging to
the story of self after this.
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The first season is packed with some pretty messy pop culture drama, but none is drawn out in personal as Britney and Jamie Lynn Spears.
When Britney's fans formed the free Britney movement dedicated to fraying her from the
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Okay, let's do strategy three, which is counterintuitive.
Really, it's quite counterintuitive.
It is avoid it, ignore it, forget it.
Isn't that fun?
Most people think, oh, but I'm practicing mindfulness.
I'm supposed to always face everything, right?
I'm supposed to always deal with everything.
I'm supposed to confront my issues and patterns and see what my mind is doing
all the time. But sometimes we just have to turn away. We have to withdraw the energy from it.
Because there are times when if we keep giving attention to the angry pattern or to the lustful
pattern or to the arrogant pattern that we're feeding lust, anger, and arrogance.
And so sometimes we just have to step back,
let it go, and kind of go on with our lives.
People do this sometimes with grudges,
where sometimes we hold grudges for a long time,
and there's a reason why we're holding the grudge.
You know, somebody did something really terrible to us.
So there's a lot of justification that we can stir up within our own minds around it.
But there comes a time when there's just no benefit to that.
And we just have to step back, move on, let it be in the past.
And we bring our attention to the present moment.
So I do think that there is value for forgetting it.
And one of the fun things in this strategy is sometimes that means we get to distract
ourselves from distraction.
And distraction can be valuable.
Anybody who's had kids knows that when the child is crying and sometimes you don't know
why the child is crying, they've been fed, they've been changed, they have what they need, they're warm, you know,
they've got their blanket on, but they're still crying, you've coddled them, you've,
you know, taken care of their needs, sometimes you just have to distract them from whatever is
disturbing them, and you pick up like a set of keys and shake it in front of their face,
and then all of a sudden, they forget what upset them.
And now everything's fine.
And there are times when we see our own minds having a little temper tantrum.
And we don't really have the wherewithal to investigate it very deeply.
Any attention we give to it, we sense is just going to get us
deeper in the morass.
And so we find some way to step out of it to withdraw our energy from it or to distract
ourselves from it.
And that can be a very useful strategy.
And I love that the Buddha included such kind of simple ordinary
strategies. And everybody knows this one, right? You're upset about something. And a friend
says, Hey, let me take you out to the movies. Or let's go play a game of tennis or something,
get your mind off of it. And we do that ordinarily with our friends, but there are times when we have to be able
to be a friend to our own mind.
And if we're really caught in something, just get your mind off of it, you know, shift,
change, pull away.
And in this sense, it's kind of similar to the first strategy, right?
I'm saying, get your mind off of it, shift.
I was talking about that with replacing.
And so it's very related to the first strategy.
But this pulling the energy away is now strongly based on having just seen the danger of
getting caught in that.
And so we're not pulling away with like avoiding all our problems or denying them or repressing them.
We're pulling away because we're pulling our energy away from that pattern.
And so at this point, it can be a very skillful retreat or withdrawal from that pattern.
Would it be safe to say that you're not disavowing the oft voiced Buddhist slash mindfulness
teacher refrain of, you know, we should learn to look at what is hard to face and process
it and metabolize it, but sometimes it's too much and it's good to distract yourself
and come back to it later?
Yeah, where we learned to set something aside and then work with it at a time when we
have the inner resources or maybe we need external support of some kind.
So again, it's another strategy in which we have an option to do something other than
just get caught in it.
Strategy number four, investigate the causes of distraction.
Yeah, this is a really important one. And it's the one that I think many meditators in the West do very well.
The only problem is sometimes people do it too soon.
And so they end up just thinking about their thinking and constructing analytical ideas
and coming to fuse an opinions about their mental habits.
So they're caught in the realm of thought.
But a meditative investigation that's done after we've developed the flexibility to shift.
So we know we're not caught in the thought, we can replace it with something else.
We've seen the danger of it, so we're committed to not be attached to that pattern, to not
really identify that pattern as necessary or who we are in our lives, because we see
it's a problem.
So we're motivated.
We've already been able to withdraw the energy, so we see that we are feeding it with our
energy.
So now we need to understand some more of the mechanisms that keep this repeated pattern
recurring, coming up again and again.
We don't have to investigate everything, because one of the earlier strategies would have
already been sufficient.
And that nasty thought would have come and gone.
That greedy thought would have come and gone and we don't need to investigate it. We investigate
the repeated ones. And then we see how what happens when that thought arises. How do I feel in
the body? How does it affect my senses? How does it affect the thoughts that link up to it? We already saw from examining the danger where it leads.
What is it rooted in?
What is it coming out of?
How do emotions and thoughts and sensations all interlock
to keep that pattern intact?
And it's kind of like spiraling inward.
I might use a kind of series of questions
that I ask myself, oh, what's happening
with the body in this moment?
And what's my feeling in relationship to the body?
And what emotion arises with that?
And I might do a kind of a literal investigation,
follow a series of questions that I pose a sense
of curiosity wanting to understand.
And as I investigate what's feeding that thought, what's keeping
the pattern intact, what are the causes that give rise to that thought or that pattern? I almost
always come to a very deep desire to construct myself in some particular way, to be seen a certain way, to present myself
a certain way, to become a certain kind of person. This investigation, when it goes deep,
almost always comes to the sense of identification, identity, the thoughts of self. And so it's
very interesting to get to the root of self-thing through any pattern
that we're working with. Now, sometimes just a few investigations of feeling the anger
in the body or sensing how it links up to emotion and thought and emotion and thought and how
those kind of feed each other. Sometimes that's it and we go on. But if I really look closely,
I'll see the root of delusion in any unhulsome pattern.
And it can be very insightful, very freeing
and can lead to a profound insight into emptiness.
Let's just hang here for a second
because this concept of a self
or it's opposite, I guess,
emptiness.
In other words, there is no core essence of Shaila somewhere between your ears, no core
essence of dance somewhere behind my eyes.
It can be, it's really, in my opinion, one of, if not the hardest Buddhist concepts to
grok. So can you just say a little bit more about how
investigating the causes of our distraction can help us see through the illusion of the solid
self? How does that work and why is that important? This is something that we don't necessarily understand intellectually. But the experience of letting go of that continuous
way of constructing self through our encounter with everything to impose a few of self upon so many
experiences that we have in the world and then to keep ruminating about it so that we keep creating
the self-story again and again and again and again.
That habit is absolutely exhausting.
And the experience of seeing that habit as just a habit
and letting it go brings such relief, such great joy,
a sense of spaciousness, a sense of allowing this process of this
mind and body, my mind and body, to occur in conjunction with everything else that's
happening in the world.
My story doesn't need to be the center of the universe, and having even just a glimpse of the way that the self-story is constructed,
the way identification is formed and reinforced through reaction, and anger, and greed, and craving, and clinging, and delusion, and ignorance,
the way that it binds us to a fantasy of who we are, that we then keep trying to assert in myriad ways in our lives.
It's just such a relief to drop it.
We don't disappear as individuals.
We still have to pay our taxes.
We still have to go to work in the morning.
We don't get confused as to whose cat we have to feed and who our family members are,
and which car we drive when we go out into the parking lot. We know who and what we are in this world.
But it's not the center of the universe. It's not an eternally existing self that needs to be
reinforced through stories. It's an unfolding process and it lightens the
low tremendously. So it's not about denying that an individual is an individual
of course we're individuals and we have our individual loves and and
responsibilities and preferences and and quirks and idiosyncrasies and
limitations and skills and genius and I mean all kinds of things
were each unique. That doesn't need to be the basis for obsessing about our self-story,
needing it to be heard and confirmed and recognized by everybody. And if they don't like it,
we change our story. Or we get angry at them because they didn't see us the way we wanted to be seen.
And we let go of all that distraction
and rumination and irritation that comes
just because the fantasy of ourselves
that we created in our mind wasn't bought into by somebody else.
And if we could just lighten up a little bit on that,
I'm not suggesting that somebody has to immediately
abandon all sense of self,
but we can see that it's a kind of crazy process
that we invest a lot of energy in,
and maybe we could relax a little bit.
Get over ourselves.
Yeah, keep it simple.
And when we look at our experience,
we don't find a self. That's the thing.
You know, we find thoughts, we find feelings, we find moods, we find emotions,
we find plans, ideas, sensations, aspirations, values, we find processes,
and those processes are continuously changing.
So we don't really need to cling to any particular story of self.
That reminds me of something I was going to try to get you to amplify earlier, which is
that when we talk about investigation here, I think we in the West are very good at psychological
investigation.
Why am I always getting so angry?
Oh, it's because my mother said this thing when I was four and I've never been able
to process it.
But the investigation you were talking about
is on a sort of the level of sensation, I think.
When I get distracted by anger or greed,
or whatever, how is this showing up in my body?
And then when I sort of drop below the level of thought
and see what are the raw data of my senses
in these moments, well, first of all, that I'm no longer.
So coden's and thought, and second, I might see what you just were pointing at, which is
that there's no solid me here having and receiving these thoughts anyway.
Yeah, but more than sensations, I would agree.
It's in the present moment, it's a meditative investigation.
We're looking at present responses.
We're not trying to blame society or our genetics or our upbringing or our
parents or our school system for our patterns because the patterns they could be one pattern or
another doesn't matter. We're looking at how we're relating to this present experience. How do we
get lost? Did this thought of lust or this thought of anger or this
rumination about a conversation we had yesterday or this anxiety about a meeting we're going
to have next week. What is the kind of entanglement in this? So we're not really looking for,
oh, I'm this kind of person from my past because Because, you know, that's clinging to a story of self.
And this happened to me because so and so did it to me.
That's a story of blame.
It's very helpful, I think, to ground the attention
in the present experience, which can be sensation
or it can be present thought or present emotion.
This, similarly, that the Buddha used
for this investigation was of
somebody who was walking fast might choose to walk slowly. Somebody who was
walking slowly might choose to sit down. Somebody who was sitting down might
choose to lay down. So one is substituting for each coarser condition, a subtler one.
So one is basically investigating not at the surface of experience, but is looking deeper.
There's a sense of just looking at what's subtler than this.
What's underlying this?
What are the causes for this?
I want to just read what the language of this
this suit is. So the description that the discourse of the Buddha uses in this step is not really
called investigation. That's my interpretation of it. The discourse says,
one gives attention to stilling the thought formations of those thoughts.
So when I heard thought formations of those thoughts, you know,
I wonder, what does that mean? And this happens a lot when we read the ancient scriptures,
because the language is different than we use. The words might be different than we use. I think
this is a pretty good translation for it, but it causes us to think, what are they talking about?
And I think that's a great thing, is that we stumble over something in the ancient discourses.
And we wonder, well, what are they talking about?
The simile then is of the person who is walking fast, might walk more slowly,
and then on to the subtler experiences.
So I interpret that and understand it to mean that one is not looking at the superficial level
of the thought
or the content of this thought, but one is looking at what's subtler and underneath it,
exploring what the causes are for those thoughts. What is keeping it as a repeated habitual pattern
that is disturbing our lives and obstructing the deepening of our concentration?
our lives and obstructing the deepening of our concentration.
So an interesting thing is to learn to develop meditative investigation,
which occurs when the mind is very still, when we're looking at different facets of an experience,
what are the conditions that make this habit re-occur?
And it's very different than looking into a self-story of our childhood.
Coming up, Shaila talks about when to say no, practical exercises for working with distraction, and ways to shift from the intellectual to a kind of lived experience. That's right after this.
right after this. Okay, so let's talk about the fifth and final strategy here.
Apply, determination, and resolve.
Well, that's what I called it, applying determination and resolve.
But just for fun, I wanted to describe the saved language from the discourse of the Buddha.
It says, with his teeth clenched and his tongue
pressed against the roof of his mouth, he should beat down constraint and crush mind with mind.
It's very strong. Very strong. And of the simile, it says, the simile that the Buddha gives for this,
is just as a strong man might seize a weaker man
by the header shoulders and beat him down, constrain him and crush him.
So too, when with his teeth clenched and his tongue pressed against the roof of his mouth,
one beats down, constrain his and crush his mind with mind.
And the mind then becomes steadied internally, quieted, brought to singleness and concentrated.
Now, many Westerners, when they read this thing,
that's rather violent, that's kind of aggressive.
That seems the opposite of being mindful and aware
and non-judgmental and meeting life with tranquility
and ease.
I mean, it just doesn't sound very appealing, but there is a time for strength.
And I interpret this to be the reflection that we are confident that our virtues are stronger than our defilements,
and that there comes a time when we say no to the defilements.
But the timing is really important, and the mistake that many people make is they
start out beating themselves up for their thoughts. The Buddha suggested this strategy, bringing
in that determination, bringing in that confidence and that strength that says no to the pattern
only after. One has already done the previous four strategies. It's a sequence. So if one has done the previous
four strategies, first of all, we will rarely need this kind of strength. Because most of the time,
one of the other strategies will have worked. It's going to only be those few really persistent
patterns that we fed for a really long time. That is going to need this OOPF added.
But the first strategy will already have developed a flexibility, so we'll realize already it'll somehow be looser,
but maybe the energy of the habit is still there. With the second strategy of examining the danger,
we'll gain the motivation that we really want to be free from this. We really don't want to live a life
that keeps feeding greed and hate. We just don't want that. And so it's strengthens
that commitment because we see the danger of it. We've learned to pull the energy away
because we've seen that there are ways that our minds feed on our attention. And so we've
learned to give our attention to things skillfully, but also learn
to pull that attention away sometimes. And we've understood, we've investigated that there are causes,
there are patterns that are in place because it's not who we are. These are conditioned patterns,
there are causes for them. And those causes are maybe deeply rooted, but they're also
impermanent. And so we've already had some glimpses of the impermanence of things, the emptiness
of the experience. We've already had moments of being free from it, but the pattern keeps coming
back. And so there comes a time at this point where it's not an aversion to those thoughts.
We're not saying no because we hate the thoughts or that we hate ourselves.
We're saying no out of wisdom. Without a shred of aversion in the mind,
we just are saying no, no more. I'm not going to give one more minute of my life to that
I'm not going to give one more minute of my life to that pattern of hate or that pattern of anger or that pattern of rumination.
And we can only do this when we already have understood the dynamic.
What if it doesn't work?
Does that mean you didn't understand the dynamic?
You just go through it the cycle again.
Okay, okay, got it.
You try the other strategies, and you keep working through it again and again.
It gives you something to do, something to try, some alternative to just being lost in
our thoughts.
And we've all tried being lost in our thoughts, and it usually doesn't lead to concentration
towards liberation. It really doesn't.
So we keep working it, we keep practicing it. Although I must say that although I rarely
employ this kind of strong no to a thought, when I have consciously applied it, it works.
Sometimes I might have to do it a couple of times.
Again, in a retreat, maybe I can remember one long retreat where my mind was really for the most part quite concentrated and peaceful,
but there was one thing that was really bugging me.
You know, something that was happening in the environment I was in,
and it was really bugging me.
And I had tried communicating about it. I had tried making some suggestions.
I had tried letting it go. I had gone through these strategies. And finally, I just realized,
I really had to let this go. It was the only same thing to do was to let it go. And yet my mind would, there would be a trigger for it, something I would hear every day.
And I would get caught in it again and again. And one day I just said, no, not out of hatred, but out of a kind of deep understanding and compassion, that there was nothing more to do about this. The only person who was suffering was me and this mind.
It was not gonna lead to anything good.
And so I said no.
And then about maybe 30 seconds later,
the thought came back.
And so I said no.
And you know, maybe 30 or 40 seconds,
the same thought came back.
And I said no. No more, no more. And that was it.
That was it. It didn't come back again. So I do think it works because it had been I was
obsessing, you know, it had been coming every time there was that sound. I'd have the same cycle
of thoughts for days and days, for weeks in this retreat. And it took a conscious
determination to say no. I think this is an example of what you're talking about.
Joseph Goldstein often tells the story about how he was on a retreat. He kept
having recurring lust thoughts or desire thoughts. And after a while I just
started putting up what he calls a dead end sign. He would just say in his
mind, dead end, dead end. And it sounds like what you were describing.
Yes, because it's saying no with wisdom, not with self-hate.
Right.
Even maybe a sense of humor.
A sense of humor is great with this, yes.
And the simile of the beating somebody down,
it's a little bit too violent for my tastes as well.
But I do think sometimes we underestimate
our own strength. And I do feel that we can have confidence in the development of our virtue and
our concentration and sometimes assert that as strength to say no to the defilements.
So if I understand correctly,
if we use these five strategies,
you're not promising we will never be distracted again.
You're just saying that over time,
these will help us with the distraction
and then perhaps over time, even more time,
we might be teaching the mind to be more focused
because we've given the mind a taste
of what's beyond distraction.
Yeah, I think these are practices
that we have to employ whenever they're needed.
So there's strategies that we use when we're lost
and thought are distracted by something that is unhulsome.
So I do think that it's something that we shouldn't go
run through the strategies once and think,
oh yeah, that worked.
I'm now free of them all.
Nor should we think, oh, I went through the strategies once.
It didn't work.
So I can quit.
Actually, I do think their processes and practices.
But the Buddha offers us an interesting kind of promise.
Maybe it's not a guarantee, or maybe there's just no timeline on it.
But one of the lines in this discourse that really attracted me
for decades, I've loved this line because it's a sense of possibility where he says,
this is towards the end of the discourse. It says, one is then called a master of the courses
of thought. One will think whatever thought one wishes to think and one will not think and a thought
one does not wish to think.
That's pretty incredible, isn't it?
Yes.
Yes.
Pretty incredible.
Yeah, most people that I know struggle with their minds because their minds are thinking
things they don't want to be thinking.
And it feels like the mind is out of control.
But there's a lot that we can do to guide our own minds. And this sequence
of strategies culminates in this comment that one can become the master of the course of
thought. One could think the thoughts we want to think and not think the thoughts we don't
want to think. And when I heard that, when I read that a few decades ago, I thought, hmm, I kind of like that, you know? I kind of like that. If my
own mind wasn't causing me trouble, then there'd be a lot less trouble I'd have to deal with,
not completely no, but the difference is remarkable. It's quite remarkable. Practice works. I'm not
fully liberated yet, but there's no question that I would never want to go
back to the mind that I was experiencing prior to practicing, and that I do really believe
that diligent practice is a great joy. And we experience, as you said earlier in our conversation,
the delight and the joy and the happiness that comes when we're not caught
by the habits of the mind. It's very attractive to not just be impangled in those patterns.
I had one teacher tell me, he said, if I think a thought five times and I'm no longer learning
anything from it, I no longer think it. And I thought, wow, and I actually believe
this guy could do it.
This guy would recognize a thought.
And you know, he'd learn from it,
he'd recognize it, he'd work with it about five times.
And then after that, he'd bring in the strength
that says, no, no more.
And they wouldn't come again.
And that's fair too because there are thoughts we need to learn
some things from our minds and our patterns, but at some point we stop learning and there's not
that much to learn. It's time to just free ourselves from the pattern, from the energy.
Before I let you go, you wanted to mention that the book also has lots and lots of very practical exercises.
Can you walk us through that aspect of your work?
You know, I think the practical exercises are my favorite part of the book,
because I include them in all three of my books where there are these little exercise boxes or reflection boxes to try to bring the maybe more structured teachings
of the Buddha into an activity or a reflection that we do in our own meditation practice or we do
in our daily interactions or activities. And many of them are simple reflections like taking a
particular aspect and focusing on it for a while.
For example, we might just try to identify a couple of recurring themes,
or maybe just even one.
Maybe there's a pattern of ruminating about something that somebody said to you.
And so you just say, okay, I'm going to just work with this one.
And prepare a few different strategies in advance so that you can apply them, so that you can
work with them.
I think it's really helpful to connect with our intentions.
And I have a number of exercises and reflections that help us identify what our intentions are.
To catch the moment when we intend to say something, when we are about to do something, and to sort of
insert a meditative and mindful pause there, so that we don't just speak or act on those thoughts
and those intentions, but we take a meditative moment to work with them. I think we just have to
find ways of applying the teachings in our lives and in our meditation,
because if we just read a book, well, it could be interesting, but it won't be useful.
We have to find ways of applying them in our lives.
So I come up with little games.
Like with the initial exercises, it's to determine which thoughts are helpful and which
thoughts are harmful.
We were using the language of wholesome and unwholesome.
So we sit for a while in meditation, and we imagine two little piles, or some frispes that
we toss one direction and another, and each thought we kind of put in a pile, and we put
another thought in another pile.
So we learned to identify the thoughts and make them into piles with just kind of mental games.
I think it keeps it fun, it keeps it lively. We don't turn our entire meditation into that, but we might play with it for five minutes in a daily meditation practice to really be clear.
Oh, that thought, it's a thought, and it's an unwholesome one. Let's put it over here. And there are different things that we can do to help us
kind of set boundaries around certain thoughts
and kind of crystallize our understanding.
So I hope that as people read the book,
that they'll really work with those exercises,
not just read through them,
but read through the exercise then,
set down the book, pause for a moment,
pause for five minutes, pause for ten minutes, do a mini meditation, and try to see and explore
that little facet of the experience, or get up and go wash the dishes and find that same
pattern of mind while you're in an activity, to try the little exercise that could give a different view on it.
I just always am looking for ways to shift from an intellectual reading to a kind of lived experience.
With these strategies, we're looking at our patterns.
We're looking at the themes that characterize the way we experience life,
that we see the world through, that we interpret things from that bias or that perspective of our conditioning,
of our pattern. And it's just so important that people see the patterns of their own thoughts.
There's another quote I love from the Buddha from one of these discourses that I use to
base this book beyond distractions on.
And it says, whatever one frequently thinks
and ponders upon, that will become the inclination
of one's mind.
And it goes on to say, if we frequently
think upon or upon harmful thoughts,
then that's gonna become the inclination of our mind.
And if we frequently think upon or upon beneficial thoughts
or skillful thoughts, then that will become the inclination of our mind. And if we frequently think upon or upon beneficial thoughts or skillful
thoughts, then that will become the inclination. And when we realize how influential every moment
of our thought is, it influences our patterns, it influences our perspective, it influences our
perception. Then we really will want to see clearly the nature of our own thoughts,
the character of our own thoughts, and work with them diligently. And much of this work is really
done in daily life because that's where we live most of our lives in interactions and in activities.
But it becomes extremely important for a meditator who wants to strengthen their
capacity for focused attention and for concentration. And until somebody is very skilled with this
movement of restlessness in the mind, deep concentration like the experiences of
John will be impossible. But this investigation also goes further
than to just develop in concentration
to support John a practice or to support
kind of a peaceful calm state of mind.
Because restlessness is one of the final fetters
that keep us from experiencing awakening.
So as we understand the forces that keep
restlessness and distracting thoughts that keep us locked into those habits,
we're loosening those habits and we're actually freeing ourselves from the
fetter of restlessness. And that goes beyond the range of just calming and tranquillizing a distracted mind and puts us into the realm of insight.
You've given us a lot here just before we end. The new book is called Beyond Distraction. Can you
also just remind us of your prior books? I believe one is called Focused and Fearless and also
maybe give us your website or other digital resources
you've put out there. Thank you for inviting that. Yes, I've written three books. I recommend
beyond distraction to read first and focused and fearless to read second. And my third book,
Wisdom Wind and Deep is for experienced meditators and hopefully you'll get that far and enjoy all of them. You can find out more about
where I teach, I teach retreats and online courses through my website, shyla-catherin.com.
And I'm affiliated with two organizations, Insight Meditation South Bay, which is a meditation center
in Silicon Valley in California, and Bodie Courses, which is an online Dama classroom,
where I offer my online courses.
So if you go to chylacatherin.com,
you'll find links to these other sites
and you find a schedule of my events.
Chyla, thank you very much.
Thank you, it's a delight to talk with you.
Like was.
Thanks again to Chyla, if you want to go back and
check out her earlier interview, which again, we paired with a
Johan Hari episode on distraction, we've put links to both of
those episodes and the show notes for this episode. So
anybody looking to go deep on distraction, go for it. The show
is made by Gabrielle Zuckerman, DJ Cashmere, Justin Davy, Lauren Smith, Maria
Whartell, Samuel Johns, and Jen Poient.
And we get our audio engineering from the good folks over at UltravioletAudio.
And we'll see you all on Friday for a bonus.
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