Leave Your Mind Behind
Leave Your Mind Behind
Leave Your Mind Behind
behind
10 09 08
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
For Mary Hoffman
—MM
acknowledgments ix
introduction
vi
PART 3: stop believing everything you think
— 30 — labeling thoughts 95
— 31 — the fishing boats 98
— 32 — letting go of judgments 100
— 33 — draw your thoughts 103
— 34 — say it again, sam 105
— 35 — songs and silly voices 107
— 36 — the thought scramble 110
— 37 — the paperweight 112
— 38 — pop-up thoughts 114
— 39 — well of sorrow 116
— 40 — white room meditation 118
— 41 — take your chihuahua for a walk 120
— 42 — the unhappy customer 122
— 43 — the thought lunchbox 124
— 44 — hold a thought like a feather 127
— 45 — the chocolate thought 129
— 46 — feeding the tiger 131
— 47 — letting worry pass you by 134
— 48 — moving into your life 137
— 49 — dropping the rope 141
— 50 — monsters 144
vii
acknowledgments
2
PART I
~
what do you
think?
o ur mind’s main job is to create thoughts. That’s what
minds do—constantly, relentlessly. Some thoughts
make sense; some don’t. Some thoughts solve problems.
Some paralyze us with fear. Some help us steer our ship.
Some run us aground on the shoals of self-hate.
Our thoughts are just a moment in time, existing only
in the synapses of the brain. While they’re less real than a
sitcom, we treat them as breaking news. We believe every-
thing we think, and that is the source of so much of our
pain. There is only one way to free ourselves from the trap
of believing what our minds create. We must understand
how thoughts work.
Understanding the mind begins with observing the
seven kinds of thoughts, and learning to differentiate one
from the other. These thoughts are:
4
planning, fantasy, and fortune-telling.
More about that later.
5
— 1 —
6
feet in diameter just above your head. In a moment, the band
will begin to descend, moving slowly down your body. As
it passes each point, from your forehead to your feet, try to
observe your feelings in that place. Notice the quality of each
sensation. Does it feel tight? Is it a dull ache? Is there a sense
of pressure, or a sense of calm or release? As the band moves
lower, let your attention shift to the new area it surrounds.
Bring all your focus and awareness to bear on the parts of
your body that lie within the band. Keep watching the band
descend, in small increments, until you have listened to each
sensation, each individual note of the body’s song.
Now expand your awareness to include the whole
melody. Inhale a deep breath and let it go; take in everything
your body feels. Listen for a moment with your whole atten-
tion. Then take another deep breath and end the exercise.
Go ahead now. Start the Moving Band Meditation. The
most important thing about the meditation is what you’re
not doing. For the most part, you aren’t worrying, planning,
remembering, explaining, or expecting. During these few
moments, your mind has been quieter. It has been watch-
ing and listening. It has been living in this moment, and no
other.
Think about these questions:
7
Is there a difference between the moving
band experience when you focus on
particular parts of the body and listening
to your body as a whole?
8
— 2 —
9
tain future, we observe the twin pillars of the moment: the
experiences inside and outside our bodies. In the chapter
on the Moving Band Meditation, you learned to observe
what your body feels. Now you can practice the next step
in awareness—shuttling back and forth between the inner
and outer worlds.
Right now, close your eyes and notice the sensations
in your body. What do you feel in your face and head?
Your neck and shoulders? Notice the experience of breath-
ing—the air going down the back of your throat, your ribs
expanding, your diaphragm stretching. Observe any sensa-
tions in your chest and stomach. Now notice any feelings
in your hips, buttocks, or genitals. Finally, pay attention to
your legs and feet.
Now open your eyes and switch awareness to things
outside your body. Notice what you see—the colors, shapes,
and special qualities of the objects around you. Now observe
the sounds in your environment—a ticking clock, traffic
noise, the drone of distant voices. Now notice the feel of
things—this book in your hands, the texture of the arm of
your chair. Pay attention to any fragrances or other smells.
Close your eyes again. Shift focus to what your body
feels. Scan from head to toe for each sensation. Some feel-
ings may be uncomfortable or even painful. Some may be
pleasant or pleasurable. It doesn’t matter. Just watch what’s
happening inside, and stay with it for maybe two minutes.
10
Now open your eyes again, and shift back to the outside
world. Notice what you see, hear, feel, and smell. Focus for
two minutes on these experiences.
Shuttle back and forth between inner and outer expe-
riences three or four more times. Try to notice something
new as you make each switch. If thoughts show up or seem
to interrupt the process, that’s okay. Just notice them, and
go back to focusing on the now.
When you are ready to stop shuttling back and forth,
take a few minutes to think about these questions. Make
sure not to look at the questions until you have had the
experience of shuttling back and forth.
11
What did you notice about your
thoughts? Did your mind quiet down or
get more active? Were there more or fewer
worry thoughts? Were there more or fewer
judgments?
12
— 3 —
watching yesterday:
memory versus observation
13
some dark part of you is bent on proving you’re unworthy,
you’ll find reasons for that too.
So what do you do with this goldmine or minefield—
your history? You can start to see it for what it is—a place
your mind can go. Or leave. If it gives you refuge, enjoy it. If
it hurts, come back to the present moment and calm your-
self in the here and now.
The “now and then” shuttle is a way to facilitate the
movement from past to present. This exercise allows you to
migrate back and forth until time hopping feels easy. Start
with a memory—any memory—that you can vividly recall.
Anchor yourself there for a moment. See the shapes and
colors of the scene. Listen to the sounds—wind or waves or
voices. Feel that moment—the temperature, the textures.
Now shuttle to the present. What do you see right
now? Let your eyes take in everything around you. Notice
what you are hearing, even the tiniest of ambient sounds.
What are your hands touching? How does the world press
against your body? Do you feel warm or cold? Stay with the
moment for a minute or two, and take it in.
Now return to the past—to another memory. It can be
anything that comes to mind; it’s completely arbitrary. Try
to see it, hear it, and feel it. Give the memory a moment to
come alive. Focus on the experience until you can feel what
it was like to live it.
14
Switch again to the present. See your environment.
Listen to whatever sounds there are. Notice what your skin
tells you.
Now keep shuttling back and forth, returning to the
past and present three more times, spending a few minutes
in each place.
When you’ve completed the “now and then” shuttle,
think about these questions:
15
— 4 —
16
bad effect on us. This helps us decide quickly whether to
approach or avoid something. But this vital process often
runs amok, and our minds let the dogs out. One after
another, they leap and tear at us—or at others we judge—
doing great psychological damage.
Judgment thoughts, whomever they target, all hail
from the same source: a belief in the way things should
or shouldn’t be. Many judgments grow from some ideal
of beauty or attractiveness. Anything less than the ideal is
labeled ugly. Some pit bull thoughts derive from rules about
competence, hard work, or proper behavior. Anyone who
breaks the rules seems worthy of blame.
You can change what happens with the pit bulls. The
very first thing you can do is begin to notice them. Judgments
have less power to hurt when you’re paying attention. Do
one or more of the following exercises to learn more about
your pit bull thoughts:
17
on that person, and notice the judgments
that arise.
18
Woundings are your self-judgments—how
do they impact your feelings about
yourself?
19
— 5 —
20
Learning to disentangle what you see, hear, and feel
inside your body from how you judge what you see, hear,
and feel is critical to understanding your mind and getting
a healthy perspective on it. Here’s what we’re saying in a
nutshell: judgments aren’t reality, but your mind thinks they
are.
The “seeing versus judging” shuttle is an exercise that
can help to make this clear. Begin by noticing your breath.
Now broaden your awareness to a sensation inside your
body. Try to observe the sensation and just notice it. Now
shift your focus to what you think about that feeling in your
body. Does it feel good or bad? Do you like or dislike the
sensation?
Now look around you. Find an object that’s either
black or brown. Study it for a moment and closely observe
its shape and dimensions, its texture and any color varia-
tions. Now shift again to what you think about that object.
Is the shape and color pleasing or displeasing? What do you
think about its aesthetics? Does it look good or ugly? Is it
new? Or old and damaged?
Now return to a feeling inside your body. Observe it
first, then switch to evaluating your thought response. Now
return back to the outer world and find an object of a dif-
ferent color. Notice all the details first, and then your judg-
ment of what you notice. Keep the shuttle going for about
ten minutes, or longer if you can.
21
When you’ve completed the “seeing versus judging”
shuttle, take a few moments to think about these questions:
22
— 6 —
storytelling thoughts
23
My friends are late for my dinner party
because . . . they didn’t want to come.
24
Right now we’d like you to think about several stories
that you return to again and again. These are stories about
why certain things have happened or not happened to you;
why you or others behave in certain ways.
Now ask yourself about each story: “Why did that
happen?” or “Why is that true?” Whatever your answer, ask
the question again. Keep asking until you run out of answers.
After doing this exercise, you may notice several things. First,
how easily your mind can cook up stories. More important,
you may notice how shallow and not entirely believable some
of those stories turn out to be.
Example: “My father hasn’t called because he’s angry at
me.” Why is that? “Because he thinks I’m lazy.” Why is that?
“Because I don’t have a job.” Why is that? “Because I keep
sending out resumés and I get no calls.” Why is that? “Because
I have a stupid resumé.” Why is that? “I don’t know.”
25
— 7 —
26
becomes a frightening string of worries that keeps us in a
constant state of alarm.
Planning, while focused on the future, differs from
fortune telling, because it doesn’t create anxiety. It’s about
solving rather than anticipating problems. Planning usually
gets down to specific steps for changing or coping with
something. Whereas fortune telling is about figuring out
the severity of a problem, planning is about cutting the
problem down to size and finally overcoming it.
Take the example of Aaron Wolfson. The event of
Hurricane Katrina and aftermath of a nearly abandoned
city threatened to destroy his cooking school, The Savvy
Gourmet. His first reaction was fortune telling, imagining
the losses—house, business, and years of financial devas-
tation. But he stopped worrying and started planning. He
turned the cooking school into a supplier of fresh cooked
food to thousands of rescue workers, police, and the media.
One of the best ways to deal with worry is to observe
your mind and learn to distinguish planning from fortune-
telling thoughts. Right now we’d like you to focus your atten-
tion on a recent worry. Give yourself a moment to really get
into it. Notice how your mind starts to paint a dangerous
future. Notice the way it seeks the most disturbing scenario.
Now shift your focus to a single (possibly small) step you
could take to reduce the risk or improve the situation. Don’t
27
try to figure out if it’s practical or look for flaws in the plan.
Just imagine this one problem-solving step.
Now find another recent worry. Focus on it till your
mind begins fortune telling, then shift to finding that first,
practical step you could take toward reducing the risk. When
you’ve finished round two, repeat the process a third time.
At the end of the exercise, spend a few minutes consid-
ering the following questions:
28
— 8 —
29
the present. Or fantasies can create such burning desires
that everything else by contrast seems paltry and sad.
Sometimes fantasies get in the way of making hard choices
and real changes. You escape to the future instead of solving
critical problems. We all pay for such escapes in the coin
of depression and a sense that our lives have slipped out of
control.
How do fantasies affect you? The best way to find
out is to notice them, and see them in the context of the
present moment. Right now, let yourself slip into a familiar
daydream that is pleasant and reliable. Close your eyes and
explore the image—notice the sights and sounds, and feel
the experience. Savor the fantasy for a minute or two, trying
to really be in the visualization.
Now open your eyes and shift your attention to the
present moment. What do you see and hear? What sensa-
tions do you notice? Keep observing what your senses tell
you for one to two minutes.
Now continue to shuttle back and forth between
fantasy and the current moment. If the first fantasy you
chose loses sharpness or appeal, find another. Keep shut-
tling for eight to ten minutes. Notice, as you transition back
and forth, how it feels to move in each direction. Now take
a few minutes to think about these questions:
30
How jarring or difficult is it to leave
your fantasy and return to the present
moment?
31
— 9 —
32
Now, after a minute or two, shift your attention to
what your mind is doing. Imagine that your thoughts are
arriving via a conveyor belt of experience. It runs continu-
ously right in front of you, carrying each thought as it forms
in your mind. Your task is to sort the thoughts by putting
one of four labels on each of them: (1) observation thought,
(2) judgment, (3) future or “fortune-telling” thought, or (4)
explaining or “storytelling” thought. For the purpose of this
exercise, ignore memories, fantasies, and planning thoughts
because that’s too many to keep track of.
After getting centered and observing your breath, try
to work at least three minutes on the conveyor belt. While
observing your thoughts, imagine pasting sticky labels rep-
resenting each type of thought on small boxes. Or you can
just say the type of thought it is to yourself. If you miss a
thought, don’t worry about it. Just watch and label the next
one.
When you’ve completed the conveyor belt of expe-
rience exercise, take a few minutes to think about these
questions:
33
Which category of thought triggered the
strongest emotional reactions?
34
PART II
~
what do your
thoughts do to
your life?
i t’s not that you have “wrong” thoughts, it’s that you can
spend too much time living from them, fused with them,
rather than looking at them. We’d like for you to learn a
very important skill—observing how your thoughts func-
tion. That is, what are the effects of your thoughts on your
life?
Because you cannot choose which thoughts come to
your mind, and because you cannot stop them from hap-
pening, it becomes imperative that you have some power
over your relationship to a thought, and what you do as a
result of that relationship. Believe it or not, this is more
important than understanding, dissecting, or analyzing a
thought’s content, since often the “whys” are arbitrary and
ever-changing.
You may ask, “Well then, how do I judge the effects
of my thoughts?” We ask you to answer that question by
studying how thoughts serve you. Do your thoughts help
bring you closer to what you care deeply about in your life?
Or do they function to keep you safe, but not actually nearer
to what is important to you in life?
Consider the thought that comes into your head when
the alarm clock goes off. “I don’t want to go to work today.”
Is that thought “bad”? No, it’s just that if you listened to
that thought and took it literally, you’d stay in bed and
miss work, risking your job and your means of supporting
36
yourself. So, is this a thought that is not serving you well? It
doesn’t function in a helpful way in your life.
Here are some questions you might ask yourself in
order to gauge the effects of a thought:
37
— 10 —
38
Observing the moment can be calming.
It also creates a rich and deeply felt
experience of the now. But sometimes
we need to stop observing and move into
action, or else nothing will change.
39
and no vacations later, his neglected wife
and kids wondered what the point was.
40
thinks. The answer lies in something called workability.
How well is a certain, oft-repeated thought working for you?
Is it helping you or not?
Let’s use storytelling thoughts as an example. Can you
remember several stories you tend to use a lot? These are
stories about why certain things happen or don’t happen,
or about why you or others behave in specific ways. Now
ask yourself these questions about each story: How has it
worked for you? Does the story motivate you or make you
give up? Does it make you feel good or bad about yourself?
Does it help you do the things that matter to you, or does it
make you afraid to move?
In general, a thought is workable when it enhances,
expands, or opens your life; when it solves rather than
creates problems. Thoughts are not workable when they
constrict, inhibit, or close off your life.
Right now, we’d like you to explore this workability cri-
terion with some of your frequent thoughts. Examine care-
fully the effects of each thought. Does it help you live more
fully, or is it shutting you down? If a thought isn’t working
for you, it’s time to stop believing in it. Instead, just notice it
so you can begin to take it less seriously.
41
— 11 —
mental marriages
43
— 12 —
judging everything
m
ost of us do a good bit of judging. We can find
flaws in virtually anything:
My mother-in-law—too critical.
44
Right now do this exercise. Look around your environ-
ment. Whether you are in a room or somewhere outside, let
your eyes roam and settle on various objects. Now see if you
can make a judgment about what you’re looking at. Notice
any flaw it might have. Keep going—moving your attention
from thing to thing—and evaluating each one in turn.
Here’s the question: Is there anything that can’t be
evaluated, that doesn’t have some flaw? Answer: Probably
not. This simple fact becomes important because every
one of us experiences moments when we actively look for
flaws—in ourselves, in others, in the objects around us. And
we can always find them.
Why do we judge? What drives us at times to seek
the negative? Listed below are some reasons why we make
judgments. Give a little thought to each one, and see which
might apply to you.
45
To prove that we’re as bad as we think,
or as bad as someone else (usually our
parents) thought.
46
— 13 —
47
Knowing why a thought shows up can give you some
distance and perspective. Our thoughts often resemble
political speeches. They sound true and convincing until we
learn Senator So and So supports a new highway because a
resort he owns would make millions when the highway is
built. Before you buy a thought, and start acting as if it’s true,
we encourage you to look deeper and seek its real purpose.
Here are some examples. You might have a thought whose
function is:
To scare you.
To paralyze you.
48
To keep you confused so you do nothing.
Your worth
Your identity
49
Your goals
Your fears
50
— 14 —
w
e create the world we live in with our thoughts.
Here’s how:
51
Though our thoughts are nothing more than the
ephemeral firing of neurons, we take them so seriously that
they can frighten us, make us hate ourselves, or make us
despise someone else. Our thoughts have the power to par-
alyze us, or start wars.
In truth, we are all painters that let our minds apply the
colors, textures, and shapes to the canvas of our lives. And
we are programmers who weave our thoughts into a little
universe with its own rules and systems and outcomes.
If your thoughts are making your world, it might be
helpful to take a good look at the world you’re fashioning. In
this exercise, we’d like you to focus on thoughts about who
you are and what you expect in life—from others, from fate.
Next, look beyond these thoughts to the world they create.
Is it bleak, with dangerous and difficult figures competing
for scarce resources? Is it warm and sunny, with generous
and caring people looking after each other? Is it a place
where no one is safe, or a place with people you can trust?
Is it a world of struggle and failure, where you can’t buy a
break, or one where hard work succeeds in the end?
Now write a description of the world your thoughts
make. What do the people do there? How do they survive?
What are the rules? What are the dangers? How do you fit
in this place? When finished, ask yourself if this is where
you want to live. Remember, this world is no more real or
substantial than a string of words. If you don’t want to live
here, it’s time to stop believing everything you think.
52
— 15 —
53
amazing thing about your brain is that all you have to do is
think about a threat in order for your body to respond with
fight or flight. It doesn’t take a tiger to respond like this; all
you need to do is think of something from your own unique
experiences that frightens you.
In your haste to flee, you may have developed ways to
escape from pain that do not to serve you well in life. For
instance, many people eat, drink, work, etc. as ways to avoid
the scary emotions. Great escape thoughts are thoughts
you have that urge you to do something to not feel hurt, or
sadness, or anger. Unfortunately, the escape instinct turns
out to keep you from accepting the initial pain that you
must feel in order to heal.
What are some great escape thoughts you might have
when faced with pain of some kind? On a separate piece
of paper, write down at least three escape thoughts. Then
answer these questions:
54
By avoiding your feelings, you have two layers of pain
instead of the one. Those escape thoughts that urge you to
avoid feeling something are just thoughts. You do have the
power to catch a thought happening, and you can choose to
respond to the thought in a new way. When you know the
thought is an escape thought, you can consider whether it is
leading you in a direction you want to head.
55
— 16 —
the seducer
56
“I don’t really have to get that memo done
today.”
These thoughts are just the bad kid in high school cajol-
ing you to do things against your better judgment. These
thoughts are attacking your well-being. They do not func-
tion as positive behavioral directors in your life. The bad kid
thought is not leading you in the direction of your values! In
the moment, this thought can serve as instant relief (from
responsibility, or facing something you’re scared to face),
but truly, in the long run they are not in your best interest.
Think about what matters to you more: getting rid of a task,
or taking care of tasks that help you get ahead in life?
57
Now let the seducer fade into the
background, and bring to mind the task
that you might be avoiding.
58
— 17 —
rogue thoughts
59
not even aware of having this kind of intent. You might
wonder, “What kind of person am I to have a thought like
that?” Remember, a thought is just a thought. Notice that you
haven’t actually ever acted on one of these rogue thoughts.
They come to your mind for an instant or two and then pass.
Rogue thoughts never lead to action. That’s because there’s
a difference between a thought and an impulse. An impulse
usually has a motivation behind it—you want that drink, or
you want to buy those shoes. Whereas a thought, especially
a rogue thought, does not have motivation behind it. You
don’t really want to poke your friend in the eye or make a
spectacle of yourself at a party.
Remember a rogue thought you’ve had in the past.
Now hold that thought in your mind. Notice that it has no
power to do anything. It’s just a thought, not a reality. Thank
your mind for that weird thought, and see if you might even
enjoy how amazing and unusual it is.
60
— 18 —
61
tures. Another may be inspired and passionate and lead the
group in new directions, perhaps without caution.
Imagine your mind functions like a brainstorming
session. There are a bunch of well-meaning ideas being
tossed around. Some are meant to protect you from pain,
some to help you get a task done, and others want growth
and progress. Imagine that you could hear the ideas in your
mind as if each one was the voice of reason at a brainstorm-
ing session. Since none are yet literal truths and still in
the idea phase, step back and just listen objectively to each
opinion before buying into a specific thought as the way to
get where you want to be.
Let’s say you’re single, invited to a party, and have a
hard time meeting people. Suddenly, the brainstorm is in
session. Each member has a different idea.
62
How would you choose which idea to listen to? They’re
all reasonable, after all. Some will give you instant relief
from your anxiety about going. Others help you get closer
to what you want, which is to meet someone.
Now, think of something you have been wanting and
also debating mentally.
Ask yourself:
63
— 19 —
bossy thoughts
64
You can think about those thoughts as if they are just being
bossy and not as something that has to direct your actual
behavior.
If a bossy thought is standing in the way of something
you want to do, or something you know would be good for
you, take the following steps:
65
— 20 —
stale bread
66
prevent it from happening again. But is that thought going
to keep you from pain? Will adhering to that thought keep
from opening your eyes to what it’s like to experience close-
ness with someone now? Make a commitment to catch that
thought as it occurs now, and note, “There’s my stale bread
thought. It’s keeping me in the prison of my past. It’s not a
reflection of what is happening here, today.”
67
— 21 —
68
Imagine yourself going to work naked. Picture your-
self walking through the front door of the office with no
clothes on, and imagine the expressions on the faces of your
coworkers. Does this image make you blush or cringe, as if
you had really just gone to work naked? The mind is a pow-
erful manufacturer of reality! But reality is not always what
you think.
Right now, bring to mind a negative word that you
think about yourself, like “unattractive,” or “boring.” Does
it feel like a word, or does it feel true? This may sound crazy,
but go and find a sticky label that you can attach to the front
of your shirt. It will need to work as a nametag. Think of one
negative word that describes something you don’t like about
yourself. Maybe sometimes you feel like a “big mouth,” a
“fake,” “stupid,” “fearful,” or “anxious.” Whatever the word
is, write it down on your label and stick it to your jacket or
shirt. Today, it’s your nametag.
Notice that it’s a word. These awful feelings you have
about yourself are just a word, a name, a label you’ve given
yourself. It’s not the truth, or the only real thing about you.
If someone in your family sees it and asks, “What the hell
is that?” hopefully you can begin to even laugh at the one
silly word.
69
— 22 —
c lose your eyes and sit in silence for one minute. What
goes through your mind? Did you worry about what
you have to do at work tomorrow? Did you wonder if your
kids were doing their homework? When you opened your
eyes, had anything different actually happened in that
minute? Mostly likely, nothing happened. You’re still sitting
in the same room, and your worries and ideas have not yet
changed anything. You haven’t done any of those tasks you
need to do for work. You haven’t asked your child to do her/
his homework. What if a good friend called you, and you
70
ended up talking for an hour? You’d forget you’d even had
those thoughts. They’d vanish into the past.
When you realize how transitory thoughts can be,
perhaps even difficult ones can lose some of their hold over
you. They aren’t any stronger than others, they’re not made
of different chemicals in your mind, and even if they were, it
wouldn’t matter. You can still learn that even when you have
a thought, you can behave differently from the thought. If
you said to yourself right now, “I’m a genius,” would you
suddenly be a genius?
Now think of three things to tell yourself that you
don’t like about yourself, like:
“I’m lazy.”
“I’m fat.”
71
You can think, “I’m so boring!” and still plan a fun date
with your husband by calling the theater, buying tickets,
and getting a babysitter for the night.
Try these exercises:
72
— 23 —
73
You don’t want to think something negative about your new
job, or be pessimistic about a date. But try as you may, the
rainy thoughts keep pouring in and soaking your attitude.
You can choose to do something different than what
your rainy thoughts have planned for you. Instead of caving
in to the negativity or dismal outlook, rearrange your plans.
Take action towards something you know you want to
experience even with the rain of thoughts. This is the fabu-
lous choice that you have—to change a course of action and
go for it anyway. Perhaps you’re pessimistic about a work
meeting. While you recap all of the miserable meetings
you’ve been to, follow through on this one, and carry your
rainy thoughts along as you get dressed, answer the door,
and step into the world.
74
— 24 —
75
have actually been happening. It’s hard to notice what other
experiences may be occurring when you have a one-track
mind, but that doesn’t have to be true.
You have a choice and a skill you can learn. The choice
is to learn to pay attention to other sensations, feelings, and
even other thoughts when your mind feels stuck on some-
thing fearful, negative, judgmental, or distracting. The skill
is mindfulness. Mindfulness can help you become aware of
the thought that is bothering you, as well as other experi-
ences that are true. For instance, if you are having a fear
thought, you can take a moment to notice what else is going
on for you. You might look up at the sky, and notice the
clouds, or the light or the darkness of a night sky. It’s like
taking off thought blinders, and looking around at what else
there is. You can open your mind and your awareness.
If you currently have a thought that is plaguing you,
bring that thought to mind for the mindfulness exercise
below. If you don’t have a thought that’s bothering you right
now, just practice the mindfulness exercise with a previ-
ous preoccupation. Or simply practice mindfulness so that
when you do have that one-track-mind experience, you will
more readily remember that you have a skill to use. Read the
exercise several times, so that you can then close your eyes
and move through it on your own. Spend anywhere from
five minutes to an hour, or whatever feels comfortable to
practice experiencing what is happening here and now.
76
Sit comfortably on a chair or lie on your
bed.
77
rising with each breath? Now keep moving
down your body, noticing each part,
and observing any aches or pains or
pleasurable sensations. Keep moving on
with awareness of another body part until
you’ve reached your toes.
78
— 25 —
79
As you release all of the energy it takes to keep them at bay,
the simple act of bringing these thoughts into your aware-
ness can send a sigh of relief through your whole being.
Now, find a quiet place where you can sit comfortably
for at least five minutes and try this exercise:
80
Notice that your mind is having the
thought, and at the same time you are
able to witness the thought as just a
thought.
81
— 26 —
y ou’d think that after having been with you all your
life, your mind would be your friend, your trustwor-
thy companion, and here to look out for your interests. The
truth is your mind is doing its job according to what it’s
been taught so far. Your mind experienced your history and
it shares your memories. It’s possible that your mind devel-
oped a safety plan to keep you from harm, which worked
at some point early on. For example, suppose your parents
criticized you in an effort to make you perform “better” in
life. They believed that by pointing out flaws, they could
help you become perfect, or near perfect. They believed
that pointing out your flaws served you well—that it was
82
the only way to help you grow and compete in this dog-eat-
dog world. You accepted that because that is how you got
approval, and maybe even love.
Your mind listened and responded by taking on that
role for you. Now, when you achieve something, or receive
praise, your mind automatically jumps at this opportunity
to make you “better” by pointing you in the direction of per-
fection. Your mind has become so narrow that it can only
hear and search for imperfections. It’s lost sight of the goal,
and what was that again? Oh, to be perfect.
Do you want simply to do well in life, to be loved, and
to feel connected to others? Do you want to have compas-
sion for your imperfections, and to be able to see them as
opportunities for growth? If these don’t resonate, take a
moment to consider your own values. What is important?
Would you like to feel love and acceptance for yourself?
Would it feel good to be able to accept that sometimes you
do things well, and are deserving of praise?
Do you remember the last time your boss, a good
friend, or your spouse expressed how well you’re doing?
What happens when you hear those positive words? Does
your mind quickly think of reasons that they may not be
true, or how another negative quality overshadows the posi-
tive one? To what is that inner critical voice in service? Is it
helping you? If you compare yourself to some unrealistic
ideal, you may just die before you’ve reached it.
83
Consider that this tendency to spotlight failures and
flaws is keeping you from what is important to you and
what you might crave: love, compassion, and self-accep-
tance. Take a moment to consider how it would feel to have
someone give you positive feedback. In this moment, hear
the positive words in your mind. When your mind starts
feeding you the negative counterthoughts, just notice them
happening and let them be. They’re just chatter—more pit
bull stuff. For what is that really of service? Is it in the service
of your interests, or of what is important to you? Now hear
those positive words again in your mind, and let them in.
84
— 27 —
85
so that your stomach rises and falls with each breath. Next,
remember something that happened to you on your last
birthday. Can you see what you were wearing? Were you
with friends or were you alone? Were you celebrating, or
working late that night? As you remember that day, can you
notice that you—the person who is sitting here now—were
there, experiencing that day? Just as you are able to sit here
now and recall that day, your observing self is able to expe-
rience the present moment. That is, just as you can remem-
ber who you were last year, you can also observe who you
are now. All that you feel, think, and do is observable when
you step back into the seat of the witness. The observer self
looks at the thoughts your beautiful mind produces and
sees them for what they are—just memories, images, and
ideas. Nothing more; nothing less.
86
— 28 —
chain gang
87
For each new rejection, you go through the whole box, scene
by scene, until you’re thoroughly depressed.
Because each life experience is linked to many others
that have the same theme or emotional tone, we often find
ourselves stuck on a chain gang. We get hit with one painful
memory after another. And no amount of regret or struggle
to escape sets us free.
Getting off the chain gang requires two things. The
first is to observe the chaining process, to really see each
link that holds us to our pain. The second is to turn our
attention to the here and now. Mindfulness breaks obses-
sive chains by focusing on the simple human experiences
that make up our lives.
So let’s make our escape. Right now, focus on one of
the following:
88
Now observe the chain of thoughts. Notice how one
leads to another. See how each thought or memory has a
“piling on” effect that intensifies your distress. Just keep
watching one thought slip into the next; observe your sub-
jective sense of heaviness, as the chain grows longer.
Now shift your attention to your breath. Let the chain
go as you feel the air slip down your throat and into your
lungs. Feel your diaphragm stretch, feel the release as you
begin to exhale. Notice that the chain gang thoughts may
be pushing to get in. Notice that your mind may even want
to embrace these thoughts.
Keep attending to your breath. Even as chain gang
thoughts pull you away, bring your attention back to your
breathing. Stay with the feeling in your throat, lungs, and
diaphragm. As new thoughts appear, notice them and
return to your breath. Your body and your breathing are a
safe harbor in that old chain gang life.
89
— 29 —
90
head to your feet, which then carried you to the sink. Or,
you have the thought, “I don’t want to go to school today.”
But you get up and go to school anyway.
Then, there are thoughts that can become like road-
blocks. Just notice these too. “I need to exercise, but I could
just go visit my friend on the way home tonight and maybe
have a drink.” Notice that these thoughts often have the word
“but” in them. What actions follow that kind of thought?
What do you actually do after having such a thought? In
this case, you end up shifting back to your value and asking
your friend to go for a walk instead of having a drink.
Consider fear thoughts. Begin to notice that when you
feel nervous about something, you might have a thought or
urge that helps you ease the fear. For instance, you have the
thought, “I’m nervous about my boyfriend’s mother coming
to dinner.” Next thing you know, you have the urge to do
some online shopping, which might ease the tension. You
can have this impulse and do something different. Rather
than distracting yourself, you can instead choose to start
reading through cookbooks to help prepare for your visit.
In a journal, or on a piece of paper, write down at least
ten different thoughts you have that lead to actions. Start
to recognize that thoughts travel from your head to your
toes, if you let them. Now ask yourself this important ques-
tion: Must this be so? Do thoughts automatically have to
91
travel from head to toes? The goal is to become aware of
choice. You have choice over where your feet go, and which
thoughts you want directing your actions.
92
PART III
~
stop believing
everything
you think
f or your whole life, your mind has been chattering away.
And you’ve been listening to it as if your mind were the
Oracle at Delphi, as if it spoke only truth. Your mind has
called you hurtful names, told you what people think of
you, and shown you terrifying pictures of what is to come.
You know now that your mind can’t help it. No matter
what, your mind is going to keep thinking. You can’t make
your mind better behaved; you can only change your rela-
tionship to it. Instead of taking every thought as gospel, you
can choose to stop believing everything you think. This
section of the book will teach you to watch your mind from
a distance, to observe—without believing or rejecting—a
stream of thoughts.
Why not work on changing your negative or unpro-
ductive thoughts to more positive ones? Because, when you
try to change a thought, you’re still in the trenches doing
battle with your thought. When you simply observe your
thoughts, you’re declaring a truce. You and your thoughts
can peacefully coexist.
No matter how certain your mind seems to be, a
thought is just a thought. It isn’t reality, and it isn’t your
enemy. The exercises you’re about to experience are going
to help you enjoy your mind while taking it much less
seriously.
94
— 30 —
labeling thoughts
95
When the Buddha was a young man, he learned some-
thing that would be a wellspring for everything he later
taught. Gautama Siddhartha discovered that thoughts are
the source of suffering when we believe them, when we
take them seriously, and when we mistake them for what
is real and true. Only when we recognize the delusion that
thoughts and reality are the same thing, only when we
begin to detach and gain distance from our thoughts, can
true peace be found.
One way to stop being your thoughts is to simply label
them for what they are.
“I’m having the thought that John is mad at me.”
“I’m having the thought that a storm is coming.”
“I’m having a thought that I need to change
careers.”
“I’m having a thought that I’m not attractive.”
When you label your thoughts in this way, it’s easier
to realize that they aren’t necessarily true. Each thought is
merely a link in the long chain of your conscious life. Right
now, do this exercise:
96
Keep going until you begin to feel a little
detached from your thinking and the
thoughts themselves seem slightly less
important.
97
— 31 —
98
As the boats approach, single file, you can see them
sway slightly. The windows of their cabins catch the early
light and flash bright orange for a moment.
These boats are your thoughts, coming one after the
other. Some are bigger and brighter than others. Some you
hardly notice before they pass beneath you on the bridge.
Though some may catch your eye and your attention, they’re
just a string of thoughts with none more important than
the other. They appear, are briefly noticed, and pass out of
sight. Watch your thoughts move, like the painted boats,
slowly but inevitably out of awareness. As soon as one is
gone, another boat or another thought takes its place. And
then it, too, is gone. No more significant, no more impor-
tant than any other.
You let them pass beneath you—and go. One at a time,
briefly watching and letting them disappear. The sun is
coming up, glinting off the ripples and the wakes. It warms
you.
99
— 32 —
letting go of judgments
100
To begin, bring your attention to your breath. Observe
the feeling of the cool air in your throat, the rise and fall
of your chest, the stretching of your diaphragm, and the
release as you exhale.
Now visualize a person you don’t like. Form a clear
impression of their face and posture; try to hear the per-
son’s voice. As judgmental thoughts take shape in your
mind, notice and then let them go. Put each thought on a
leaf floating down a stream. Watch as it drifts around the
bend and out of sight. Do the same with the next thought
and the next. Keep this up for at least three minutes.
Refocus on your breathing. Now visualize a recent event
in which you were upset and someone behaved in a way that
felt wrong, dangerous, or foolish. Get a clear mental picture
of what happened and what was said. Again, as judgmental
thoughts rise in your mind, watch briefly and let go of them.
Let them float away on a leaf and out of sight.
Return your attention to your breath. Now imagine
yourself standing naked in the mirror. Visualize a part of
your body that you don’t like. Listen for judgments, and
don’t get caught in them. Put them on the leaf and let them
drift out of sight.
One last time, attend to your breath. Now create a
mental image of something you once did but now regret. As
the scene comes into focus, and you watch the event unfold,
101
notice your thoughts. Then place each thought on a leaf and
let it go.
If you like how mindfulness helps you feel during
storms of judgment, we encourage you to do this exercise
each time you catch yourself playing Pitch-and-Dunk.
102
— 33 —
103
A thought that made you feel bad about
yourself (unworthy, ashamed, guilty).
104
— 34 —
w
e all have thoughts that thunder into our minds like
a runaway train. Big, heavy, irresistible.
I screwed up.
105
tists call them automatic thoughts because these show up
with a will of their own. They leave a wake of shame, fear,
or defeat.
One amazingly simple way to reduce the power of
automatic thoughts is to repeat them. Out loud. It’s called
Titchener’s Repetition, and it’s based on the discovery
that if we just keep saying something—about fifty to one
hundred times—it loses all meaning and the power to hurt
us. No matter how menacing the thought is when you start,
it becomes absurd or silly as you keep saying it.
Okay, let’s do it and see what happens. Sometime in
the last hour you had a thought that bothered you. It might
have been a “what if” worry, or something that made you
feel bad about yourself. Whatever it was, reduce it to one or
two words, and say them out loud right now. Keep saying
them at least fifty times or until you stop feeling anything
about them. Sooner or later, they will lose their power
because they will lose all significance. They will become
mere words; nothing you have to buy or believe.
Notice that part of the power of automatic thoughts
lies in their secrecy and in your effort to avoid them. When
you do the exact opposite by saying a thought often and
out loud, it becomes no more important than an oft-heard
commercial on the radio. They become words so boring and
mundane, you’ve stopped listening.
106
— 35 —
108
light-hearted tone. Instead of feeling so important and true,
they begin to seem a little absurd and a bit over-done.
Another fun way to look at your painful thoughts from
a distance is to say them with silly voices.
109
— 36 —
110
get close to the elevator, your heart races, and you think the
same words in this order.
Now, write down the same sentence completely out
of order. It might look like, “Go an I’m scared elevator in
to.” Say this new sentence to yourself ten times in a row.
Does the scrambled sentence elicit fear in you? Now, write
a scramble for a situation you fear. Keep the scramble in
your wallet. Next time you approach something with that
fear, take out your scramble, and say it to yourself, replacing
your actual fear sentence. What happens to the meaning of
the words when you do that? And what happens to your fear
when you do that?
111
— 37 —
the paperweight
112
Find a quiet place where you can sit quietly for at least
five minutes. Consider specific thoughts in which the con-
tents carry a certain amount of heaviness. Visualize that
thought as a paperweight such as a large crystal, or a dark
stone like a piece of granite. You don’t need to lift the paper-
weight or remove it. All you need to do is realize that certain
thoughts carry this kind of gravity. But just let them be what
they are—paperweights. So, say to yourself, “I’m having the
thought that I’m sort of down at the moment.” Just notice
the thought, and accept that it is present in your mind.
Now, also consider something that is important to you,
something that exists alongside the paperweight thought.
For instance, “I want to spend some time with my daughter
tonight, maybe read a book to her after dinner.” Visualize
the action you’d like to take. Choose a time and place that
you want to take the action, and allow that to guide what
you decide to do with your time at some point in the day
or night. Remember that paperweight thoughts can rest
heavily on your mind, but you can still take action to do
what matters to you, not by removing the paperweight, but
by being aware of its existence and taking action anyway.
113
— 38 —
pop-up thoughts
114
the bills.” Then, “Jesus! I’m here at the theater. I want to be
here, now.”
Sometimes your mind is mindless. It wanders, and it
arrives at thoughts you don’t even want to be having. You
think you just want to pay attention and enjoy the show, and
then you realize there are pop-up thoughts just like those
pop-up ads on the Internet. Fine, let the thought pop up,
and then, catch the fact that your mind is producing the
thoughts. Watch the thoughts coming, fast, and let them
be there. You decide whether or not to read what’s in each
window. Don’t get involved with them. Just remind your-
self you’re having pop-up thoughts, an automatic stream of
consciousness. You don’t have to read them. Just recognize
them for what they are, and click back on the performance.
115
— 39 —
well of sorrow
l ife throws a lot at us. From the moment at birth when they
slap us on the bottom all the way to the last medical pro-
cedures to sustain our lives, we have to deal with pain. Life is
full of sadness, hurt, shame, fear, and loss. On top of all the
unavoidable pain, we often end up heaping more on ourselves
with our thoughts. We endure hard times, and then flog our-
selves with judgments for what we did wrong. Or we specu-
late about what bad things might happen in the future.
It’s as if the ordinary pain of life were not enough. We
have to think about it, evaluate it, and make sense of it. And
all that thinking seems to do one thing—turn our necessary,
inescapable struggles into a deeper kind of suffering. We end
116
up dealing with far more than our original loss or fear, because
our thoughts act as a psychological bullhorn. They amplify and
repeat everything. They keep blaring that we’re stupid and no
good, or create nightmare scenarios of what might befall us.
Here’s something to consider: While the pain of life
must be accepted, the add-on suffering caused by our
thoughts is not necessary. What if our thoughts were
nothing more than drops falling into a well of sorrow? What
if our thoughts were momentary—forming and falling into
the darkness, sensed only briefly before we let them go?
Do this exercise:
117
— 40 —
118
Mafiosi in Stetsons and overcoats. Then try other images.
For instance, make your thoughts into:
Flying crows
Waddling penguins
119
— 41 —
120
with some fear or excitement. That’s all it takes—a thought
fires, and you react. Now, imagine that your mind is just like
the small, yapping dog. Imagine that your thoughts are just
like the barking that may have no cause, and are simply noises
that pop out at random times.
Today, you are going to take the Chihuahua for walk. Sit
still in a quiet room for even just five minutes. Imagine your-
self clicking on his leash and stepping outside to take him for
a short stroll. Each time a thought enters your mind, focus on
the image of the Chihuahua barking. Maybe he is barking at
a cat running across the street. Perhaps a butterfly landed in
the grass near you both. He lets out a loud yap. Now a person
walks toward you, and the dog goes nuts, jumping up and
down and really barking at this person. The person passes,
he forgets the person existed, and he’s quiet again. Just let the
dog bark for whatever reason, and then watch how he stops.
He barks, and then he walks for a few moments in silence.
Each time a thought enters your mind, imagine it’s just
a bark. Some last longer than others, some are quick and high
pitched, and some may growl and cower. Then the yapping
stops as you keep walking and passing random objects that
may or may not cause a reaction. You can observe your
thoughts the same way you can imagine watching the
Chihuahua. Thoughts are similar to barking—they may or
may not have a cause or purpose. They come; they go. Watch
them come, and then watch them go.
121
— 42 —
122
will also just come, and then leave the premises. You can
note what the chief complaint is, but don’t evaluate it, or
decide if they’re right or wrong. Your job is just to listen
to their gripe, validate their experience, and help figure out
what they’d like instead. Irate customers don’t have to like
everything, and you don’t have to change their minds. All
you have to do is listen and move on.
Remember, the thought belongs to the unhappy cus-
tomer, not to you. Luckily, you can choose to notice the
complaint, acknowledge the unhappiness, and then move
on to the next table.
123
— 43 —
124
To experiment with this idea, try carrying around
your “liver sandwich” ideas on little pieces of paper or a few
index cards.
126
— 44 —
127
“I’m having a thought that I’m sad.”
At first, you might respond by clinging to the thought,
or else battling it and trying to stamp it out of your mind.
But today, in this moment, recall a thought with which you
struggle regularly. Hold the thought in your mind, and hold
it as lightly as a feather, as if the slightest breeze could come
along and carry it away in the wind. Bring the thought to
mind with fascination at how creative your mind can be in
its efforts to assess the world. You may even laugh at how
hard your mind works at holding onto this thought. Release
the power it holds over you by visualizing it as a soft, white
feather.
What does this thought do to serve you? Does it help
you get closer to the people you love, or does it offer your
body nutrients and longevity? Does it help you achieve what
matters most to you? Just notice this thought with accep-
tance and compassion. Thank your mind for the thought,
but realize you don’t have to do anything with it or because
of it.
128
— 45 —
129
have to allow the chocolate thought to drive you in a direc-
tion you don’t want to be going.
The key is acceptance. This entails becoming aware
of the thought, and actively embracing the content of the
thought. Chocolate pops into your mind. You can picture it,
imagine where it might be hiding in your house, and even
salivate a little just thinking about it. Now, focus on embrac-
ing the thought, and thank your mind for sending you the
thought. In essence, don’t try not to think the thought. What
is more valuable to you? Acting on the chocolate thought?
Or, do you value the ability to refrain, to sit with the craving
but to ride it out? It will pass; all thoughts do. Instead, you
might choose to select something that is healthy and that
will bring a sense of comfort and wholesomeness, like a cup
of tea, or some almonds and raisins. You’ve accepted the
thought and chosen to direct your own actions.
130
— 46 —
131
was deep and menacing, but the man had already given it
everything. The tiger didn’t mind; the man would be a tasty
meal.
Your scary, fortune-telling thoughts are like the tiger.
The more they frighten you, the more you feed them by
giving in and doing what they say. And the more you feed
them, the stronger and scarier they get.
Think about it a moment. What do you do when a
scary thought tells you to avoid something? Sometimes you
give in and steer clear of what frightens you. Your mind
tells you to stay home because you might feel awkward or
embarrassed at a social gathering. Or your mind says you’ll
fail if you try to change jobs. So you hesitate. Or your mind
suggests that your husband will get angry if you bring up a
certain issue. So you stay quiet.
Every time you obey scary, fortune-telling thoughts by
avoiding something worth doing, you make your fears more
powerful. And eventually the fear tiger gets so big, it begins
to consume your life.
When scary, fortune-telling thoughts well up, ask
yourself:
132
If I listen to my mind, what valued goal or
experience would I forego? What would I
miss out on that matters to me?
133
— 47 —
letting worry
pass you by
134
worry to the back of our mind where it boils and bubbles,
forming a constant undertone of danger. It seems the more
we push worry away, the more it inhabits our unconscious
and darkens our sense of the future.
Changing your relationship to worry requires that you
learn to neither embrace nor resist scary thoughts. Instead
you will watch them as a sailor watches the waves of the
sea—without particular meaning, without particular inter-
est. Each wave is a small event followed by another. Each
wave is a moment that passes.
Here’s how to let worry thoughts pass you by:
135
Return to your breath. Feel it settle into
your chest. Feel it fill and press open your
ribs.
136
— 48 —
137
quence, you build up these safety thoughts, and you avoid
experiences that your thoughts tell you might hurt you in
some way.
While your mind tells you that holding on to the
thought that keeps you safe will protect you, instead holding
on to a thought is what binds you to suffering. For instance,
you might think, “If I really feel the deep sadness within
me, I might be so overwhelmed by it that I won’t ever get up
and function again.” You don’t want to experience sadness,
so you resist experiences that may bring on sadness, like
sharing intimacy with someone. You spend a lot of time
keeping others at a distance, as you refuse to experience
sadness. The safety thought is, “Don’t get too close, and you
won’t feel sadness.” You soon have a nice little moat built
around you, with nice high walls that keep everyone out. So
your thought succeeded in its first goal—to keep you from
sadness. But now you have one pain on top of another—you
have no intimacy, and yes, no sadness. But you might have a
deeper thing—suffering.
Buddhists call the struggle to hold onto certain
thoughts “clinging.” Your mind becomes so narrowly
focused on the one thought that keeps you from experi-
encing something you fear, that you become like the child
clinging to the skirt, as if it protects you from pain. It’s really
more like avoiding a sensation that might feel uncomfort-
able. Sometimes allowing yourself to feel discomfort is more
138
important, because your life is not restricted by a rule that
you’ve created. When the child lets go, it’s uncomfortable at
first. But then, she moves forward into the classroom.
Today, choose a safe place to sit comfortably and
consider just one thought you cling to. It could be a safety
thought—something that you think you need in order to be
safe emotionally, mentally, physically, or financially. Like, “I
have to look good or no one will like me.” Or, “If I don’t have
enough money, I’ll never be secure.” When you have that
thought in mind, also ask yourself what else may be true
beyond that thought. Like, “If I don’t have enough money, I’ll
never be secure. And, I’ll still be a kind and loving father.”
Now try this:
139
Take five deep breaths, each to the count
of three.
140
— 49 —
141
“No one will ever love me,” by trying to talk yourself out of
those thoughts, is arguing with yourself. You’re arguing with
your own painful thoughts and feelings, and it becomes like
a game of tug-of-war. On one side you have the bad thoughts
and feelings about yourself that compete with the thoughts
on the other side of the rope that tell you, “You’re not so
bad! I’ve noticed people actually do like you!” This argument
takes a tremendous amount of time and energy.
What if you just dropped the rope and ended the
struggle? If you’re willing to have the negative thoughts,
you can accept them for what they are—thoughts. No
thought or feeling is permanent. Just allow yourself to have
the thought, because you know you will survive it. Survive
it by observing the thought rather than just believing it as
the end-all truth. Next, choose to respond to the thought by
choosing an action that moves you in the direction of what
you value and care most about in life. It takes practice and
effort, but your quality of life will actually change. You will
now notice that you are having a thought, and will remem-
ber to get into the seat of the witness and watch a thought
without judging or changing it. That is what dropping the
rope really means.
On a separate piece of paper, list three negative, self-
evaluative thoughts with which you struggle. These are
thoughts you have, but that you try to talk yourself out of,
or try to escape in some way. Now imagine the thoughts in
142
a game of tug-of-war, with opposing thoughts on either side
of the rope. With each negative self-thought, ask yourself:
monsters
144
Here’s something to consider that might begin to free
you. Monster thoughts are just products of your mind. They
aren’t reality; they are mere fortune-telling. They offer a
picture of the future—of what could happen and how you
might feel—that may never occur. What if the monsters
kept you from doing something very important, and they
were nothing more than an idea or a scary image?
Here’s a new way to relate to monster thoughts: