After finish reading
The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle, I become more conscious of my thought. I’m
not surprised when I found myself couldn’t stop thinking, because that’s pretty
much what I’ve been doing for my whole life. That’s also how I identified
myself as a human. Noticing that it is just how everyone else’s been doing.
In fact, that way of
life has made me a dead meat. I might still look like a real person: be nice to
other; set some life goals; and have a hobby, but I haven’t been actually
alive. The thing is, my thought has been running my life this whole time. Thanks
to the book, recently, whenever I caught my mind wandering, I would shout
internally, “come back!” I do come back, but that wouldn’t be for long. Seconds
later, I’ll be somewhere else.
I desperately want
to arrive at some point in the near-future, where I project myself as a better
person with better life. I delete my unrealistic monthly goals and wait for the
next month to come, just to set other seemingly-realistic goals. I rewrite my unchecked
to-do-lists and convince myself that I’ll do them tomorrow. I wake up every
morning and tell myself that it’s going to be a good day.
These doings lie on
the same false believe: the now is a stepping stone for the better future. The now
becomes a wait for an arbitrary thing called the future.
The clock time
surely is a helpful tool for organization. It does give me lessons from the
past and hopes for the future, but my life happen now. Once I’m done using the clock
time for practical reasons, I should return to the present moment immediately
and be truly alive by being in the now.
There is never a
time when my life is not now. It has always been that way and it will always
be.
I’ve been dead for
too long.
Now is the only time
to wake up.
Maybe, you are too.
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