The
Parable of the Thinker, Part 1
My soul is feasted as with marrow and fat, and my mouth
praises thee with joyful lips, when I think of thee upon my bed, and meditate
on thee in the watches of the night; for thou hast been my help, and in the
shadow of thy wings I sing for joy.
- Psalms
63:5-7
For as long as he could remember,
James knew himself to be a thinker.
When he was a tiny child, James'
parents thought he had a problem. They thought he couldn't stay focused, but
the truth of it was that James was very focused. In fact, James had an incredible
knack for being able to hold his thoughts solely on whatever he wanted. He
never told anyone else about this skill. After all, what business was it of
theirs?
He made sure that no one heard him
when, as a toddler, he declared, "I am a thinker!"
James found that the more he thought
just about one thing the more the rest of the world faded into the background.
He could still hear and see and feel everything around him but that all became
secondary to the object of his thoughts. The longer he concentrated on whatever
he wanted the more he could disappear into the mental version of it. The world
around him became less and less real while the world of his thoughts became
more real.
James' mother took him to a doctor.
"This boy has an attention deficit disorder," said the man. "His
mind always wanders. He can't concentrate."
James heard him speaking but he
didn't pay much attention. He was thinking about ice cream. In fact, he had
been thinking about ice cream for several hours. The man's voice annoyed him
somewhat but it was way off in the background somewhere and, ultimately, of
little concern.
Ice cream, however, was everywhere.
One day, in the solitude of his
bedroom, James proclaimed, "It is especially good to think about
things." That very same day, James went to school and the teacher asked
him a question but James did not know the answer.
James was thinking about tigers.
"You have to pay
attention!" said the teacher. "Don't you want to do well in school?
How will you ever get a job when you grow up?"
All James heard was the roar of the
Tiger as it hurtled over him and pounced on the teacher.
Years went quickly by as James
thought about things. In fact, the passing of time would become very distorted
when he was engrossed in thought.
Minutes became hours, hours became days, days became weeks. "Time
flies when you're having fun," he had heard someone once say.
Later in his life people tried to
teach him all sorts of things like math, and history, and science. It was no
use though; by this time, James had practiced a few basic expressions that made
those around him just leave him alone.
"He's not very bright,"
they would occasionally say.
James heard them but didn't care. He
was thinking about girls.
He thought about girls for a long long
time. He didn't try to actually meet any girls, or talk to them. He just
thought about them.
Some girls would say, "He's very
quiet...and strange." Occasionally a few would even try to talk to him but
James found he didn't like them very much. They wanted him to pay too much
attention to them. They wanted to decide what he thought about. They actually
wanted him to just think about them. This was definitely not something James
wanted to do.
As he went to bed he would whisper,
"It is good to control one's thoughts."
One day, though, James happened to
hear something that sparked his curiosity. In class the teacher asked a girl
who sat next to him a question. She stared blankly back at the teacher and
said, "I'm sorry, I was thinking about something else."
James began to watch this girl and
noticed that she was rarely paying attention to the world around her.
"Perhaps she is like me,"
he thought.
Her name was Joanna and, as it turned
out, she was very much like James. She too preferred to think about things
other than what was going on in the world around. James observed her for quite
some time until finally he was satisfied that she was indeed like him.
"I will think about
Joanna," he decided triumphantly.
Very soon he found himself thinking
about her quite a lot indeed. In fact, she became the only thought that
completely filled his mind, the single thought that took over and became
everything inside of him. Quite simply, he couldn't stop thinking about her.
One day he worked up his nerve and
spoke to her. She was aloof and non-responsive but James was persistent and
eventually he convinced her that they were the same.
Much to James' joy, they began to
date and, for a while, James was very happy and spent all day, every day,
thinking about Joanna. He thought about what she would like, about what would
make her happy, about what he could do for her. He honestly cared about nothing
else in the world. She, in turn, thought about him as well. Finally, he
concluded, he had found something worth thinking about in the real world.
Thinking about another person made
James very content and happy.
James realized something else as well
though, something he found very curious indeed and in the silence of his bedroom,
when everyone else in the house was fast asleep, he spoke out loud.
"Thinking by myself is good, but sharing my thoughts with someone else is
even better!"
Sometimes, James even wished he could
get directly inside of Joanna's mind, where he could see her thoughts
firsthand, and actually become part of her thinking itself. How wonderfully
intimate that would be!
Then, one day, Joanna informed James
she had decided that they should break up. She told him, "I've been
thinking about someone else."
James was devastated.
"How can you be so cold and
indifferent?" he asked. "I thought I meant something to you?"
Even as he finished his sentence he could see that Joanna was already far away
in her mind, thinking about some stranger, or perhaps some exotic foreign
place...or ice cream.
Although he tried very hard for quite
some time, no matter what he did, he could not get Joanna to think about him
anymore. Eventually he had to give up. He still thought about her but he knew
she was not thinking about him. James spent many hours wishing he could somehow
make Joanna think about him again.
"I cannot control Joanna's
thoughts," he finally had to admit to himself. "Having someone think about me felt wonderful, but
having someone stop thinking about me and forget me feels horrible. Even if I
could make Joanna think about me again though, it wouldn't be the same. She'd
have to want to think about me of her own free will. Otherwise, what would be
the point? From now on, I will only be concerned with my own thoughts since
those are the only thoughts I can control."
This plan made him feel better, like
he was once again in charge of things, but as time went by, he was shocked to
find that his wonderful concentration seemed to be deteriorating. Try as he
might, the thought of Joanna always returned and began to crowd out other
thoughts. If he thought of a baseball game, Joanna would be pitching. If he
thought of a tiger, Joanna would show up to hunt it. If he thought of ice
cream, it would taste like Joanna had tasted when he'd kissed her. Constantly,
at all times and on all days, he struggled with his thoughts but the idea of
Joanna, somewhere out there, not thinking about him, just wouldn't go away. The
strain began to take its toll on James.
"Maybe I have been wasting my
time all along," he said one day. "Perhaps it is time to live in the
real world. At least out there it is highly unlikely that I will ever see
Joanna again."
This was, in fact, true because
Joanna had already moved very far away from where James lived.
"If she has taken up residence
in my mind," he concluded, "then I must move out here into the
world!"
So, for the first time in his life,
James began to pay strict attention to the world around him. This led James to
think, also for the first time, about his career (or lack thereof). "I
must make something of myself...but what can I do?" he asked himself.
"What am I good at?"
The truth was that James was not very
good at anything in particular...except thinking. That's all he had ever done. He
was a very talented thinker but, no matter how hard he looked, he could not
find an employer looking precisely for this skill.
"I'm an excellent thinker,"
he would tell them in his interviews.
"Yes, but what kind of
experience do you have?" they would answer.
James quickly became discouraged and
his gift for thinking started to slip more and more out of his control.
Although he still thought about Joanna, he now also began to think about
another thing that he had never really thought about before. He now thought
about the past.
"Why did I waste all that time
thinking about ice cream?" he would ask himself late at night. "Why
didn't I pay attention to what everyone was trying to teach me?"
When he had thought about ice cream
as a child he could practically taste it in his mouth. Thinking about the past
was similar in that it too seemed very real to him, but he couldn't control it.
The past was already over; it was decided. He could review it but he couldn't
change it to his liking. He could eat any flavor of ice cream he wanted in his
mind, but he still couldn't go back and change the past. His thoughts of the
past were definitely not under his control.
He tried thinking about the future
instead and although he could craft his thoughts about this to some degree, he
found that it offered him no real comfort. Maybe if he had the same kind of
control he once had over his thoughts it might have worked but now the future,
with its limitless possibilities, only caused him anxiety. All his speculations
would quickly become tainted with encounters with Joanna or more failed
interviews. It now seemed that since he had begun to live in the external
world, his mind intended to make it very clear to him that he did not have
control over the future either.
"Not having control is very
bad," he thought grimacing, "but thinking about the fact that I have
no control is even worse." That was how James began what would turn out to
be the worst train of thought he had ever initiated. Without realizing the danger
he began to think about his own thinking.
Here's how it happened:
He thought, "I hate the things I
thought to do in the past."
Another thought quickly followed.
"I hate the way I have always
been thinking."
And finally he simply thought,
"I hate thinking."
This made James feel very sad,
although he did not really understand why. You see, without knowing it James
had gotten himself into a serious pickle. As a tiny child he had known he was a
thinker. Later on, he told himself that thinking itself was good...especially
good. To make matters worse, he had then concluded that controlling his own
thoughts was the best thing to do. Now, he was deciding that he hated thinking
and consequently James began to hate himself. He didn't specifically think,
"I hate myself", but even though he was unaware of the underlying
chain of connection, the connection was most assuredly there.
As his depression worsened he began
to search for someone to blame.
"I wasn't born this way!"
he thought. "Who gave me the idea that I was a thinker in the first place?
Who made me like this?"
First, James began to feel angry
toward his parents. Surely they'd had something to do with the development of
his personality. Why hadn't they stepped in and done something to help him way
back when he was a tiny child? Hadn't they seen what was happening? Then James
remembered how he had never told anyone about his thinking, how he had
purposefully developed ways to hide what was truly going on in his mind, and
how his mother had taken him to the doctor. Yes, James could clearly see that
his parents were not to blame. He had done everything possible to hide his true
condition from them.
Next, James considered all the
teachers he had ever had. Shouldn't they have been able to advise him?
Shouldn't they have been able to see that he was getting himself into trouble?
"Someone must have seen what was
happening," he thought.
This didn't work either. James now
remembered all the people who had tried to get him to think about his career.
He had never listened to any of them.
Of course, James also thought about
Joanna.
"If Joanna hadn't left me I
would still be happy," he thought. "I would be happy thinking about
her and none of these other thoughts would be plaguing me!"
This strategy didn't work very well either
because James could now see how tenuous his dependency on Joanna had been.
Anything could have happened to separate them. Perhaps if Joanna had stayed he
would have been happy for a little while longer but it was inevitable that it
would have ended at some point and he'd be in the same fix. He was at a loss.
"Something is definitely not
right anymore," James thought with disgust, "and nothing seems to be
helping. How can I get everything to come out for my good?"
He thought some more.
"If only I had never met Joanna
at all. I was always happy before she came into the picture. I hate her for
coming into my life. It was because of her that the way I think changed in the
first place. I wish she had just left me alone!"
Even this thought failed to help
James feel better. Even if it was true he knew that he was the one who had
approached Joanna in the first place. She hadn't been interested in him but
he'd kept pursuing her until she'd relented. Surely, it was all his own fault.
He was to blame for initiating the events that changed his way of thinking.
That was the only real problem. It wasn't anything in the world around him. It
was him. It was his very mind that had been infected somehow. He wanted nothing
more than to cease thinking entirely.
James began to investigate the world
around him for help.
"There has to be someone out
there somewhere who feels like I do," he thought, "someone who can
understand what I am going through."
He tried to explain his thinking
problem to a few people but they didn't seem to really understand.
"You're still thinking about
Joanna," they would say. "You need to move on. You've got to get your
mind on other things."
"This isn't even about
Joanna!" James would protest. "It's me now. I'm different somehow.
Getting my mind on other things is precisely the problem. I don't want my mind
to be on anything at all!"
This kind of talk seemed to greatly
bother the few people James thought he could talk to and they didn't want to
discuss it anymore. He could tell they thought he meant he wanted to die. James
quickly gave up on explaining his problem to the people he knew.
James began to read a lot, partly to
try to find an answer to his problem and partly to escape the depressing
thoughts that continued to surface in his mind. By this point, it seemed he
needed to bombard himself with constant stimuli in order to control the
subjects of his thoughts at all. He was never happy. He jumped from subject to
subject in his mind, book to television to book to worrying about not having a
job, back to television, on and on, always searching for something new to think
about, something that might make him feel better. Things were indeed very
different from when he had been a young child and had been able to focus his
mind so easily.
This sort of struggle continued for a
relatively long time until, one day, James gave up trying to shift blame or
divert his attention endlessly from one topic to the next. Finally he just
surrendered.
"I'm done," he thought quite
simply one day upon waking from sleep. "I give up. I have nothing left to
try."
Oddly this thought made James feel
happy. It seemed like it should have made him even sadder but it didn't. It was
nice to finally stop struggling. James sat very still in the silence of his
room and took a deep breath.
Next to his bed was a pile of books
someone had given him. Looking around his quiet bedroom now he happened to
notice the top book. The title of it caught his attention.
Nothing Works
He picked it up and read the blurb on
the back. The book was about meditation. The subject matter seemed appropriate
and James found the author's style quite agreeable. The premise of the book ran
something like this: the way to happiness is to practice focusing your mind
solely on one thing until you gain mastery over your thoughts. Then your
thoughts can then be directed at nothingness. Eventually, by meditating on
nothingness, one will find true freedom from all the suffering and misery of
life.
It seemed like a good idea to James.
In fact, it seemed like the very
answer he had been looking for. His goal should surely be to think specifically
about nothing. After all, he had spent his whole life thinking about something.
In the distant past he had focused on one thing for hours inside his thoughts;
he had been so much happier then, as the book described, but he had never
progressed in the external world around him. Now that he thought about the
external world so much, he never felt at peace inside. According to this book,
although he had started off on the right path, although he had become an expert
at focusing his thoughts on one thing, he had never gone to the next step. He
had never made the one thing he focused his thoughts on "nothing".
It was time to purposefully think
about nothingness.