A few years ago, I inadÂverÂtentÂly opened an email that unleashed an insidÂiÂous virus on my lapÂtop. My screen immeÂdiÂateÂly became a mineÂfield of pop-up ads, hunÂdreds of new winÂdows openÂing and overÂlayÂing each othÂer to fill the screen with flashÂing images and alarmÂing beeps and pings. I could no longer see the imporÂtant docÂuÂments beneath the riotous pixÂeÂlaÂtion, could hear nothÂing but alarm bells.
This memÂoÂry came to me in techÂniÂcolÂor detail this mornÂing as I was medÂiÂtatÂing. The more I tried to quiÂet the thoughts in my head, the more pop-up winÂdows my mind opened.
I thought about how litÂtle I still underÂstand the sitÂuÂaÂtion in Gaza, wonÂdered what the balÂance was in being informed and proÂtectÂing my peace.
I menÂtalÂly pracÂticed the openÂing guiÂtar lick in Edge of Seventeen.
I listÂed five-letÂter words that would be good openÂers in Wordle.
I thought about what I wantÂed for lunch, remindÂed myself to call in a preÂscripÂtion at the pharÂmaÂcy, rehearsed what I would say in class latÂer that day. I thought about cheese, about co-regÂuÂlaÂtion, about clouds.
Just like the white-winged dove, sings a song sounds like she’s singing. I cirÂcled back to Stevie Nicks.
I catÂaÂstroÂphized, comÂpared, planned, ponÂdered, strateÂgized, stressed, rememÂbered, and remÂiÂnisced, one pointÂless mind pop-up after another.
This doesn’t make me bad at medÂiÂtatÂing. It only makes me human. We were designed to have a lot of thoughts—more than 60,000 per day. And most of them are comÂplete garbage. But with so many thoughts, how do we pick out the ones that matter?
How do we hear the call of our hearts beneath all the exterÂnal noise?
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Turns out, we have a bioÂlogÂiÂcal mute butÂton in our brain. The Reticular Activating System (RAS) is a part of the brain responÂsiÂble for selecÂtive attenÂtion. Ever heard of the cockÂtail parÂty effect? It’s the psyÂchoÂlogÂiÂcal pheÂnomÂeÂnon that allows you to be in a room full of talkÂing peoÂple and focus (mostÂly) on what the perÂson in front of you is sayÂing. That’s the RAS in action. It turns down the ambiÂent staÂtÂic and right-turns the volÂume on the perÂson you’re speakÂing to. It gives prefÂerÂenÂtial seatÂing in the brain to those things you choose as important.
Being able to attend to one stimÂuÂlus and to ignore othÂer irrelÂeÂvant senÂsoÂry inforÂmaÂtion is a superÂpowÂer. But, of course, it takes pracÂtice to defrag our cogÂniÂtive hard drive.
In medÂiÂtaÂtion pracÂtice, we often use “sense anchors” to help steady the mind. The anchor you choose could be a senÂsaÂtion, like the moveÂment of your belÂly butÂton as you breathe, or the warm, loaf-of-bread feel of a dog in your lap. The anchor can be a parÂticÂuÂlar thought, choosÂing to focus on one idea while attemptÂing to ignore the othÂers (this is what hapÂpens when we repeat a mantra).
The more you focus on the anchor, the quiÂeter the rest of the garbage thoughts get. The less you get lost in the thought stream. The thoughts are still there, for sure. But we can selecÂtiveÂly choose to mute them a litÂtle. It closÂes some of the unhelpÂful menÂtal winÂdows so that we can see the imporÂtant docÂuÂments beneath all the pop-ups.

