Painful memories.

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Individual
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Painful memories.

Post by Individual »

I've noticed that painful memories seem to last longer than happy ones. They are stronger in my thoughts and dreams. So when my mind wanders, whether asleep or awake, it often comes across a painful memory which makes me angry or anxious. And yet very rarely does my mind wander across a happy memory. It is in fact very easy to forget happy moments and very difficult to forget moments of suffering. Even if I try to think of a happy memory and find one, it does not have the same emotional impact as thinking of a painful memory.

Is this true for everyone, what is the cause of this problem, and what would the Buddha have said about it? Why does the mind seem to collect painful memories and disregard happy ones?

Even if I consciously try to stop dwelling on painful memories -- there are quite a lot of them -- even if I think, "There is no past or future, only the present," or "There is no self. So, this memory is not of me, but is simply like a dream," it does not go away or only goes away temporarily; it feels like a physical sensation.
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BubbaBuddhist
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Re: Painful memories.

Post by BubbaBuddhist »

I think this is typical of a depressed personality or someone going through depression. Mind has anxious or depressed feelings so it looks for "hooks" to hang them on. The more intense the feelings, the more painful the memories Mind will dredge up. Sometimes in issues involving mind and emotion, it's hard to tell which is the cart and which is the horse.

J
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Individual
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Re: Painful memories.

Post by Individual »

Bubbabuddhist wrote:I think this is typical of a depressed personality or someone going through depression. Mind has anxious or depressed feelings so it looks for "hooks" to hang them on. The more intense the feelings, the more painful the memories Mind will dredge up. Sometimes in issues involving mind and emotion, it's hard to tell which is the cart and which is the horse.

J
That is a good explanation, but how can a person be mindful of anxiety before it has hooked onto a certain memory and remove these hooks once they are there?
The best things in life aren't things.

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Cittasanto
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Re: Painful memories.

Post by Cittasanto »

Individual wrote:
Bubbabuddhist wrote:I think this is typical of a depressed personality or someone going through depression. Mind has anxious or depressed feelings so it looks for "hooks" to hang them on. The more intense the feelings, the more painful the memories Mind will dredge up. Sometimes in issues involving mind and emotion, it's hard to tell which is the cart and which is the horse.

J
That is a good explanation, but how can a person be mindful of anxiety before it has hooked onto a certain memory and remove these hooks once they are there?
The Breath, just do the practice, and the concentration helps with the depression, although painful memories tend to linger longer than happier ones anyway, it is just how we dwell with them which makes them a problem.
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Ngawang Drolma.
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Re: Painful memories.

Post by Ngawang Drolma. »

Individual wrote:Even if I consciously try to stop dwelling on painful memories -- there are quite a lot of them -- even if I think, "There is no past or future, only the present," or "There is no self. So, this memory is not of me, but is simply like a dream," it does not go away or only goes away temporarily; it feels like a physical sensation.
I can really relate to that. So much so, that I hardly have a good suggestion. At the elevated times, it does manifest like a physical sensation.

For me, being mindful of anxiety-stuffs or those painful memories/experiences/mind activities involves remaining aware of them, and letting them be like a cloud passing through the sky. And reminding myself that they always do pass. It's almost like respecting their right to wiggle in for a while. Fighting it always makes it worse for me and compounds the problem.

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retrofuturist
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Re: Painful memories.

Post by retrofuturist »

Greetings Individual,

Often memories resurface because there's something unresolved about them... observing them mindfully, see if you can find their origin and their cessation.

Be careful not to attach to these memories or identify with them... remember everything that is not-self. Identification will lead to papanca and that papanca (particularly of this depressing kind) will lead to suffering.

Metta,
Retro. :)
"Whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things."
Individual
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Re: Painful memories.

Post by Individual »

retrofuturist wrote:Greetings Individual,

Often memories resurface because there's something unresolved about them... observing them mindfully, see if you can find their origin and their cessation.
Nothing seems to be unresolved about these, because the situations are far into the past and re-appear, almost of their own volition, from time-to-time, during casual acts of self-reflection. The anxiety and distress, as someone pointed out, exists before the memory appears, and the memory is simply a "hook" for the emotion to latch onto. That is, emotions are by nature situational. For every feeling there is, it is directed towards a certain object; a person feels a certain way always about something. But when there is an emotion present or arising that isn't related to something, it searches for something to relate itself to. This is different from the types of emotions that arise in reaction to physical circumstances.
retrofuturist wrote: Be careful not to attach to these memories or identify with them... remember everything that is not-self. Identification will lead to papanca and that papanca (particularly of this depressing kind) will lead to suffering.
Thinking about non-identification does not remove the habitual identification, because it has been developed for so long and is deeply ingrained. To a very large degree, suffering and ignorance seems to be unavoidable. Overcoming both and understanding the mind is the greatest mystery of all and easier said than done. Because what stands in the way of new action is the view of a self ("I cannot do that new action, because I am this," is fixed, but there is the possibility for new action, when there is the thought, "I can do that new action, because I am not that,"). However, the mental recognition of the non-existence of self is not the same as the experience, which is like swimming through a tsunami, climbing a mountain, or taming not simply a monkey or a wild horse, but taming a huge monster with many heads and many faces, like a hydra.

So, a person can walk around saying they are a Buddhist and meditating, but not much changes, unless they put forth that rare, unexplainable effort in every situation -- an effort which arises from beneath the conscious mind -- or unless they find themselves lucky enough to be in circumstances conducive to awareness. And even the slightest lack of vigilance against sensual desire makes any discipline which follows worthless, because even the subtle entertaining of sensuality -- delight in food, the warmth of a shower, the feel of one's pet dog, or the sound of one's mother's voice -- this lays the foundation for the more gross and painful forms of sensuality, such as laziness and drug-use.
The best things in life aren't things.

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retrofuturist
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Re: Painful memories.

Post by retrofuturist »

Greetings Individual,
Individual wrote:And even the slightest lack of vigilance against sensual desire makes any discipline which follows worthless, because even the subtle entertaining of sensuality -- delight in food, the warmth of a shower, the feel of one's pet dog, or the sound of one's mother's voice -- this lays the foundation for the more gross and painful forms of sensuality, such as laziness and drug-use.
I see your point, but it's not all or nothing... especially so the further from liberation you are.

Sometimes simple happiness can be the basis of kusala mindstates.

Metta,
Retro. :)
"Whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things."
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