The Myth of the Empty Mind
Popular culture often portrays meditation as an act of achieving a blissful state of complete thoughtlessness. This widespread belief is perhaps the single biggest reason why so many aspiring meditators give up in frustration. They sit, close their eyes,
and expect a switch to flip, silencing the constant internal chatter. When thoughts about work, dinner plans, or a conversation from yesterday inevitably bubble up, they feel like they’re doing it wrong. This expectation sets a goal that is not only unrealistic for beginners but is a misunderstanding of what most meditation practices aim to achieve. The mind's job is to think; trying to forcibly stop it is like trying to stop the ocean's waves.
Your Brain Is a Thinking Machine
Our brains are wired to think. On average, a person has tens of thousands of thoughts per day. This mental activity is a fundamental part of how our brain functions, constantly making connections, solving problems, and processing information. This inherent tendency is often referred to in meditation circles as the "monkey mind," a term that vividly describes how our attention can swing from one thought to another, seemingly at random. Trying to suppress this natural process can often backfire, making thoughts more active and insistent. The idea isn't to cage the monkey, but to learn to sit with it peacefully.
The Real Goal: Observation, Not Obliteration
If the goal isn't to stop thoughts, then what is it? For many mindfulness and insight meditation traditions, the true aim is to change your relationship with your thoughts. The practice is about cultivating awareness—learning to observe your thoughts as they arise without getting swept away by them. A helpful analogy is to imagine yourself sitting on the bank of a river. The thoughts are like leaves floating by on the water. Your task isn't to jump into the river and stop the leaves, but simply to watch them come and go. This practice creates a space between you and your thoughts, a realisation that you are the observer, not the thoughts themselves.
How to Handle Thoughts When They Arise
So, a thought pops up mid-meditation. What do you do? The key is gentle redirection, not forceful suppression. A common technique is to simply and neutrally label the thought. You can say in your mind, "thinking," "planning," or "worrying." This act of labeling acknowledges the thought without feeding it energy or judgment. After labeling, you gently guide your attention back to your point of focus, such as the sensation of your breath. This process of noticing your mind has wandered and gently bringing it back is the core exercise of meditation. Every time you do this, you are strengthening your muscle of awareness.
Redefining a 'Successful' Meditation
It’s time to redefine what a successful meditation session looks like. Success isn't a 20-minute void of total silence. Success is simply showing up. It's the act of sitting down and practicing, regardless of how busy your mind feels on any given day. Some days will feel calmer, others more chaotic, and both are perfectly normal parts of the process. The real victory isn't in having no thoughts, but in noticing that you were lost in thought and choosing, with kindness and without self-criticism, to return to the present moment. Freedom in meditation comes not from an empty mind, but from realizing you are not a slave to its every whim.
















