waterchan wrote:I understand that according to the Dhamma the mind is not permanent, but quantized as a series of discrete thought-moments which constantly arise and cease.
My question is, what practical benefits does this knowledge bring during meditation and in lay life? Whether the mind is one long continuum or a series of discrete thought-moments, I still remember what I had for dinner last night all the same. So what is the practical benefit?
Thanks in advance.
I think it has a lot of usage when it comes to destructive emotions. I'm better at not clinging to negative emotions when they arise. When I was younger I would get really attached to these negative emotions and keep them going in my mind. Now, I'm better at just observing and remind myself that "this will pass". That doesn't mean I don't get sad, angry, depressed, mad, etc. I do, but it doesn't stay around nearly as long as it did before I was more mindful of these things.
Since nothing is permanent is anything really worth clinging to? I'd say no, but we don't act that way. When we go on a trip and experience joy we cling to it and feel sad to have to go back to work. These feelings are understandable, but when you really step back and look at things objectively it's silly that we get attached to these mind moments of pleasure when in reality they're just fleeting. Yet still, we chase after them time and time again. Even having this knowledge of impermanence in your mind still makes it difficult not to get caught up in pleasure seeking. That's what's so unfortunate about samsara. We keep chasing after mirages...and it's endless and ultimately leads no where.