Words of Wisdom every Wednesday - an excerpt from a book, an article and if you're lucky we'll have have a guest post! This Wednesday an excerpt from Wayne Dyer's, Wisdom of the Ages:
Learn to be silent. Let your quiet mind listen and absorb. ~ Pythagoras (580.B.C.-500 B.C.)
It has been estimated that the average person has sixty thousand separate thoughts each and every day. The problem with this is that we have the same sixty thousand thoughts today that we had yesterday, and we'll repeat them again tomorrow. Our minds are filled with the same chatter day in and day out. Learning to be quiet and meditate involves figuring out a way to enter the spaces between your thoughts; or the gap, as I call it. In this silent empty space between your thoughts, you can find a sense of total peace in a realm that is ordinarily unknowable. Here, any illusion of your separateness is shattered. However, if you have sixty thousand separate thoughts in a day, there is literally no time available to enter the space between your thoughts, because there is no space!
Most of us have minds that race full-speed day and night. Our thoughts are a hodgepodge of continuous dialogue about schedules, money worries, sexual fantasies, grocery lists, drapery problems, concern about the children, vacation plans, and on and on like a merry-go-round that never stops. Those sixty thousand thoughts are usually about ordinary daily activities and create a mental pattern that leaves no space for silence.
This pattern reinforces our cultural belief that all gaps in conversation (silence) need to be filled quickly. For many, silence represents an embarrassment and a social defect. Therefore we learn to jump in to fill these spaces, whether or not our filler has any substance. Silent periods in a car or at a dinner are perceived as awkward moments, and good conversationalists know how to get those spaces occupied with some kind of noise.
And so it is with ourselves as well; we have no training in silence, and we see it as unwieldy and confusing. Thus we keep the inner dialogue going just like the outer. Yet it is in that silent place, where our ancient teacher Pythagoras tells us to let our quiet mind listen and absorb, that confusion will disappear and enlightened guidance will come to us. But meditation also affects the quality of our nonsilent activities. The daily practice of meditation is the single thing in my life that gives me a greater sense of well-being, increased energy, higher productivity at a more conscious level, more satisfying relationships, and a closer connection to God.
May you be inspired - everyday!

Pic Courtesy: Microsoft

3 comments:
How true Corinne ... we have no training in silence !
Listen to the soundtrack of a typical Hindi movie ... non stop noise and dialogue ! Someone must teach them that silence is also a way of communication
Meanwhile I will NOT be silent , and must commend you for your initiatives and thoughts on such topics
Keep it up girl !
What a nice way to recall the immortal Pythagoras. Listen and absorb, it's life's secret of keeping pace with the chatter of everyday living. Thanks for sharing this wisdom.
@ Ravi G - Well said Mr G. While a great deal of time is spent on learning to speak, so little focus is given on being silent and listening to our inner voice. Strange in a country that gave the world Buddha.
Thanks for all the encouragement - it means a great deal.
@ LIta - You're welcome. Thanks for the visit.
Post a Comment