Seven steps to a calmer mind

To contemplate reality, one has to get himself there. St. Augustine would claim that without moral purity no contemplation of truth is possible. However, even to get this drive towards the good and moral, to be able to grasp it, some discipline and silence, that is space for the mind to reflect are necessary.
Below I regard seven useful and easy steps one can take to begin his journey to a better and moral life (morality as a proper direction of will towards the right and beneficial for all things), and eventually to contemplation and philosophical knowledge.

1. Walking in nature (more here). The requirement for this one is to be alone in a natural place. Walk in the quietest time of a day. Have no distractions with you (no phone because it is the worst distraction), be consistent and walk every day, spend no less than 30 minutes on a session.

2. Ordering social life. This stage may come later after a period of practising the first step. Only after you begin to appreciate periods of silence, you are not so willing to swap silence for a talk. Some acquaintances you have may need to disappear from your life because they bring much distraction. Social life should be structured and straightforward (here I don’t talk about family and close friends because it is inhumane to think of them in terms of use). Those we know need to answer a criterium of purpose either on a visible level of everyday life or on a scale of meaningful communication, where the latter means gaining knowledge and getting personal growth as a result.

3. Reducing the amount of information. Whatever goes into your mind, stays there for a long time. Memory preserves every consumed bit of information and brain processes it. Thus, to come closer to an inner self informational fasting is required. Better put, you have to be deliberate of things you let in.

To get a better hold of steps 2 and 3, think of yourself as one who will be repeating the same day eternally. What would like to be doing on that day? Who would you spend it with?

4. Reading thought-provoking literature. It is self-explanatory as long as you don’t go into reading esoteric new-age garbage. Philosophy, religion, art, and science should be the first on the list.

5. Writing. Do it in many forms – a diary to keep progress in everyday life, notes for a more extended thought, poetry for self-expression, and so on. The goal is to see yourself from outside. Writing helps build a better theoretical view of oneself, progress from opinion to knowledge.

6. Meditation. This practice has countless benefits: calmness, control of emotions (based on the delayed response), dissociation with picture-thinking, concentration, and ultimately self-actualisation.

7. Proper sleep, that is, without too many dreams. It can be only achieved through enough sleep at regular hours. A sleeping routine must be devised to sleep well – for example, meditation, reading, cold shower and no visual information or socialising two hours before sleep.

Here you have it – the simplest and most mundane things to do that can have a significant impact on your life. We are so distracted by impressive things that forget how to enjoy life in its simplicity. Steps 1, 6 and 7 I call recreation as distinct from entertainment that corrupts, demoralises and stupefies us, makes us dissatisfied with our lives. Steps 2 and 3 are concerned with the social dimension in general and speech in particular; it needs to be addressed because if we use (hear and speak) a language of others, we may adopt the notions of its conveyors, and it’s advisable to watch that carefully so that not to fall prey to false ways of life. Steps 4 and 5 are the only that advance intellect, whereas all the rest are rather formal and create conducive conditions for moral and intellectual advance, that is the advance of will and knowledge, that is consciousness (in the end, free will show itself to be reason and reason free will). 

Let me know if the article was helpful.

Processing…
Success! You're on the list.
2 replies on “ Seven steps to a calmer mind ”
  1. A bit rigid in time-scaling, but still useful and substantional article.
    The author definitely has skills to convey information concisely and pithy.

    1. Thank you for the comment! You’re right that the article is a bit short. It is due to its purpose, that is to provide a general scope of ways of a balanced life. I’ll be developing each moment further as, for example, I’ve already done with walking in the article “10 days to silence”.

Leave a Reply to Alexander Krapenitskiy Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.