Thursday, November 22, 2012

The Past-Future Continuum

The future is nothing more than a projection of the past. Think about it. The future, in the way we think, is an image we create in our minds based on everything we know, everything we've learned and everything we believe to be true. These include not only ideas and memories, but also feelings, sensations, fears - all that we have ever experienced and as a result come to value. It all comes from the past.

So the future then becomes nothing more than a shadow of the past. Much like when a streetlamp in the dark shines on an object and creates shadows of varying distortion - our awareness too, when it reflects on the past creates various images of the future. Some of the images (shadows) are large and menacing, others are fainter and more transparent. But regardless, just as object and shadow are inextricably linked, so too are the past and the future.

You cannot have a shadow without an object to create it. You cannot have an object that doesn't cast a shadow when brought into the light. When you bring attention and focus to the past, the mind inadvertently begins to approximate potential future scenarios. Similarly, when you are thinking about the future, the mind is automatically accessing its memory banks at a rapid pace. You may have heard the saying, "History repeats itself." This is in effect what is happening.

The future we perceive in our minds is never something new. It is just a different version of something old. That is because nothing new or fresh can come from the past.

To experience the new is to be present. In this present, lies the freshness that comes from spontaneous experience. Being present  requires us to become open to not knowing, to relinquish our over-dependence on our knowledge. Because knowing implies the past, it implies a sacrifice of a real experience for the memory of an experience, the sacrifice of reality for a virtual reality.