Thinking – Discovering my inner world
I have always had this habit of
letting my thoughts loose to just wander around, and trace back the chain of
thoughts as to see where I started from and how I reached a certain thought.
This is my favorite past time, when I wait for appointments, buses, during
travelling and almost all the time when I am left idle. Today it occurs to me
that I have never wondered about my experience of thinking itself, while
actually doing it all the time, either consciously or unconsciously.
Today, when I think about my
experiences of thinking, I realize that my thinking wasn’t constant throughout
my journey. I thought differently during different points of my life. Various
factors affected my thinking in various ways. So, can I say “thinking
is not a constant experience but a dynamic one?” “Does one’s thinking depend on
their life experiences?” I feel
that I think very similar to my dad. Most of the times, we come out with same
thoughts and words. It makes me wonder if thinking is influenced by inherent
characteristics or genes. I also wonder if thinking actually needs a language.
I remember a time, when I used
to think in Telugu, which is my mother tongue. While today, I think in English.
Now I tried to think in Telugu once again, and it seems to be little difficult.
“Does
thinking have a language? Does it have preference of one language over the other?
”Is there clarity of thought when one thinks in the language they are
comfortable with?” does thinking mean “listening to your own thoughts?”
My thinking isn’t always
monologue. There is a dialogue between two sets of thoughts. I argue with myself and at instances laugh at
my own arguments. Further extending these thoughts, I sometimes think in
pictures too. These are the pictures I either recollect from my memory or
sometimes create them myself.
Now, with my thoughts pondering
about thinking, I am discovering a whole new world inside me, which I never
realized, that existed. I most of the times lived in this ‘thought world’
playing different roles from an innocent sleeping baby to savior of the earth.
I use this world as my rescue, when I need to run away from the real world. I
remember this particular incident of picturing myself as bold speaker, while I was
standing on the stage and trembling to speak. Most of the times, this thought
world takes me into its arms to comfort me from real life problems. I create a
whole scenario of the problem and its alternative solutions to estimate the
effect each solution would have on me and people around. There were times when
I pictured myself as solving these problems and standing as an achiever. Almost
all the time, I am the protagonist in the play.
Though thinking happens all the
time, thoughts are not always meaningful. At times, they tend to be random, unrelated,
weird and creepy too. It takes enormous amount of energy to channelize my
thoughts and not let them wander around. It makes me feel like a mental
exercise. Thinking about mental exercises, sometimes I wonder how the phrase “food
for thought” came into existence. “Do thoughts really need food?” “Do we
lose our thinking ability if we don’t practice it (or can I say feed it)?” Does
it become easier to channelize thoughts with practice? Are there methods to keep
one focused on a single thought? Are there ways to develop specific ways of
thinking like critical thinking and creative thinking? Are there ways to
practice ‘not-thinking’?
I also had instances where I did not think
absolutely anything. At these instances, I did not think of not thinking
anything too. My thought world would be blank and I wouldn’t realize that I wasn’t
thinking anything. This mostly happens when I dance. My body dances to the
well-practiced steps but my thoughts go blank. These are the moments I feel
like in a world of eternal peace. “So, is thinking causing turbulence and
making me loose peace?” “Is it good to think at all?” “What
happens if we don’t think? Is it possible to stop thinking voluntarily?”
With all this thought about
experiences of my thinking, should I call it an experience at all? Is thinking
an experience like pain or pleasure? Can thoughts be felt? Do thoughts have any
impact on physical processes of the body? Do thoughts control our body or body
controls our thoughts?
Thinking about thinking is more
like questioning the question. Should we ask right questions to figure out
right answers? Do these questions have answers or will the answers lead to more
questions and a lot more thinking?
Hi harini a very nice thought! excellent!
ReplyDeleteThinking about thinking as the name itself suggest that its an endless process for each and every individual in this world.But i want to say that people who are into this thinking loop are either very much practical,or, very sensitive,or lastly it should be a person who must have locked his/her inner world of emotions, memories, ideas and desires.Now we have to know to which category we fall in and to which category to choose to give the brain the right thought......