How To Learn Intelligently With Perseverance

Even learning demands our mindful attention, without which the learning process gets laced with implicitly encoded conditionings from our painful past. These unconscious conditionings then sour our process of learning the same way they sour everything else in our lives, a process that should be like play: Pleasurable, passionate and fun. In this essay I would like to address this issue in more detail, spurred on by learning impasses some participants in the Mindsight Intensive encounter.

Both God and the devil dwell in the details, as you all know. The devilish details need to be smoked out from their burrows and forced into the light, which is exactly what one of the Mindsight Intensive participants recently did (I don’t mention his name, because I did not ask his consent). He wrote the following in an email to me:
“Hi Dr T – Me again!! In one of your previous e mails that I can’t locate you mentioned if you don’t understand something then ask or something along those lines? Do you recall that e mail? Anyway, I don’t know if it’s just me or others are experiencing the same issue? I find it very hard to follow that last session; quite frankly you lost me!! I was rather discouraged after “thinking is it just me that’s not getting it”!! Is this common? I did discuss this with one of our classmates and she felt the same way. She said that maybe others were experiencing the same, but hesitant to share it. Is this Intensive to deep for me??”
Another student wrote the following shortly after:
“Thank you for the ‘light reading’ over the holidays. Took a quick look … and boy do I feel stupid… At first glance, it would appear I’m in way over my head….. You’re killing me (figuratively)…. If I am still clueless by the 2nd, please consider a refund?”
Incidentally, several participants had so far only given me positive feedback about the new course, saying that they all seemed to really enjoy it. This is in itself interesting, because it is quite obviously much easier to tell your teacher that you really like what he or she is doing, much more difficult though to communicate that you don’t understand.

In my role as mindfulness teacher these emails from struggling students are pure gold, because through the courage of these folks to say it as it is, we get all served on a silver platter the most mouth-watering menu of mind creations we all have or will encounter one way or another. What these two participants express is universal and deserves a closer look. Incidentally, in my experience students who openly explore this interesting energy and information flow of the mind feeling stuck, end up doing exceptionally well.

Let me start with some research findings regarding the common traits of highly intelligent people as compiled by Shana Lebowicz:
1. They are highly adaptable, meaning that they are able to admit when they are not familiar with a particular concept.
2. They understand how much they don’t know: They are not afraid to say ‘I don’t know’, because if they don’t, they can learn it.
3. They have insatiable curiosity: This means being open to experience, which includes intellectual curiosity. Einstein apparently said: “I have no special talents, I am only passionately curious.”
4. They are open-minded: This includes a willingness to accept and consider other views with value and broad-mindedness and be open to alternative solutions, while also being careful about which ideas and perspectives we adopt.
5. They like their own company: This is the ability to love one’s own mind and embrace what we don’t like about it.
6. They have high self-control: Impulsiveness is replaced by planning, clarifying goals, exploring alternative strategies and considering consequences. Remember the marshmallow experiment from one of our last sessions?
7. They are really funny: Having a great sense of humor is essential, because it also allows us to humor our own foibles and limitations and not be too identified with them.
8. They are sensitive to other people’s experiences: This refers to emotional intelligence, and as you know, the resonance circuitry in the brain responsible for a harmonious relationship with others is the same that is responsible for our relationship with ourselves. To deal with learning challenges we need to apply a lot of gentleness and self-respect, which we summarize with Daniel Siegel’s acronym COAL, curiosity, openness, acceptance and love.
9. They can connect seemingly unrelated concepts: This is the process of linkage that is part of integration, and a hallmark of creativity.
10. They procrastinate a lot: This refers to completing daily tasks, because the mind is busy with more important things. It also speaks to an important brain function for health: The ability to daydream, meandering and noodling around, aimlessly indulge free associative thinking just because there is nothing else we can do at that moment.
11. They contemplate the big questions: This means spending time musing about the meaning of life, about the universe, life and death, and the point of everything we encounter or do.

To address these unpleasant feelings that can arise during learning we can start very simply. Like any other experiences, learning experiences are either pleasant or unpleasant. The unpleasantness of a learning experience is part of the inevitable pain we routinely encounter in our lives. Unpleasantness immediately creates a sense of aversion, which means that our organism activates processes by which it can eventually eliminate the pain. As this occurs, old conditionings, unresolved implicit memories and other learned behaviors get mixed into the process of finding a solution, thereby complicating the original experience of unpleasantness manyfold, turning the inevitable pain (” … I find it very hard to follow that last session …”, or “… At first glance, it would appear I’m in way over my head.”) into optional suffering (“… I was rather discouraged…”, or “…. boy do I feel stupid”). Since the first instinct is to ‘get rid’ of this pain and suffering, thereby activating the fight/flight or even the freeze system in the brain, the aversion, which is now so amplified that it is experienced as intolerable, sets in motion powerful identification mechanisms (“… is this Intensive to deep for me?” or “… I am just too stupid for this …”). Such identifications suggest that we are the problem, rather than that we unwittingly create a problem and therefore end up having a problem. We then mistakenly believe we are incompetent for the challenge reality confronts us with, and escape actions we call ‘avoidance’ are immediately put in place (“I have to leave the course” or “Please refund me the money”). Without having had the chance to examine these complexities, we identify with our wish to flee and … voila – we have just wrecked our lives with yet another automatic reaction that really does not solve anything except for providing us with the illusion of temporary relief.

One fundamental aspect of mindfulness and mindsight is the ability to see clearly, and when such cascades of automaticity occur (which tends to happen more often than not), what we need most is to STOP: Stop, Take a breath, Observe and Plan. This is our cherished YODA (You Observe and Decouple Automaticity), without which we cannot interrupt the automatic and destructive cascade from aversion to avoidance, from craving to grasping, or from indifference to ignoring. Unable to bring spaciousness into the gaps between the inevitable original arisings (aversion, craving and indifference) and the following evitable reactions (avoiding, grasping and ignoring), life becomes hell and the mind our worst enemy; conversely, if we can stop in the gaps and take our time to look around, observe and reflect, life becomes liberating and the mind our best friend.

Remember that you participate in a mindsight course, which means that everything that arises during the course, absolutely everything, all your experiences without exception, including experiences of feeling incompetent, stupid, in the wrong place, overwhelmed, in over your head and more, all these experiences are worthy of examination. When you do examine them, a whole world of freedom offers itself to you, where learning challenges become fun rather than drudgery, interesting rather than insurmountable, growth-promoting rather than stifling, and reassuring rather than unsettling.

How can you go about turning such adversity into an advantage?

1. You need the courage to publicly feel stupid. This courage is not just necessarily given to you; you may have to practice it by throwing yourself into the perceived jaws of judgments. A course such as the Mindsight Intensive lends itself beautifully for that, because we are in the company of like-minded people who all practice being comfortable with ignorance. You are in good company when you embrace ignorance – didn’t Socrates already over 2000 years ago say that the only thing he knew was that he didn’t know anything? Didn’t we examine in the first 3 sessions how peripheral our consciousness is, and how dominant, unfathomably vast and eternally inscrutable the non-conscious is? Haven’t we seen again and again how our left-brain compulsion to know limits what we can see, and that the art of unknowing is at the centre of our training and our ability to embrace complexity and health? So be my guest: Cultivate comfort with stupidity!

2. As you listen to the lectures or read the material, separate in your mind what you do understand from what you don’t (differentiation), then flag what you don’t understand and reach out by asking questions, both in the sessions and via email, asking both me and your classmates about what you don’t understand. Ask and ask and ask until it becomes a full-time job and people get sick of your asking (at which point you can with good conscience relish your role of questioning nuisance). In my own experience as a child I quickly discovered that classmates of mine seemed to get things so much faster than me. By the time the teacher had finished explaining something they all seemed to get it, while I didn’t. So I started to ask and pester my teachers, requesting them to slow down and take it step by step. At first, I developed a reputation of being a slow poke, at times even dense. My saving grace was that I not only did not care about my reputation, but secretly relished it, because it always yielded great results, and the knowledge I acquired became rock solid. With time however, as my classmates waited patiently and not so patiently until I got it (some of them very happy that I asked because they didn’t get it either, but were afraid of asking), we all also started to discover that my ‘not getting it’, slowing down and repeating the process of explaining, yielded new, unexpected and deeper insights into the material that would have never surfaced otherwise. It became a running joke that certain classmates of mine tried very hard to become more dense like me.
What we can learn from this is that ‘not getting it’ for the most part has nothing to do with being dense, stupid, incapable or any of those nasty things (although it has everything to do with wrongly perceiving yourself as being all those nasty things). On the contrary, it can be the expression of a different learning style, maybe even a learning disability, or simply an unconscious intuitive knowledge that fast and superficial skimming through the material will not satisfy, and that a slower, more reflective, even contemplative approach is required to understand more deeply than on the readers digest level. Even if it is a learning disability, the very process of asking and slowing down, parsing the knowledge into digestible bits, turns what may seem like a disadvantage into a strength.
Asking is the mind correlate to the neural formation of new associations in the brain. By asking you expand the wiring in your brain, you open your mind to infinite possibilities, and you deepen your relationships towards greater depth and mutual understanding. By answering you limit your brain wiring to the conditioned, you close your mind into the prison of beliefs and preconceived ideas, and you restrict relationships to the superficiality of inauthenticity. You may be aware of how difficult asking is for you. Your mind may be constricted by implicit memories of parents and caregivers discouraging you or even scolding and rejecting you for asking questions, causing you to feel stupid for not knowing. Socially in the group your relationships may be restricted by a constant fear of judgment, projecting on others that they all know while you are inadequate. These entanglements beg to be recognized, not acted upon, and healed, so that we can get back to the business of integration, not staying stuck in rigidity or chaos. Stupid questions don’t exist, only suffering students who think they are stupid, or suffering teachers who think they either know or have to know everything. Remember, the main goal of finding answers is not to become smart, but to find better questions!

3. Accumulating knowledge that remains at our finger tips and can be used in the field of the present moment whenever we need it, requires that we study far more than we will ever need. This principle forces us to embrace the wide context within which we act and live our little lives, thereby ensuring wiser decision making. So yes, sweat, curse, work hard, and if necessary kick me figuratively in the shin. As they originally said in the hockey world, when the going gets tough, the tough get going! And then, ladies and gentlemen, then comes the prize of all this intelligent struggle: You are furiously rewiring your brain towards integration and health – not bad isn’t it?

4. When initially you are not an expert in this field of mindsight, it will naturally take a bit longer to get into it. You might for example be reassured to know that I have had the privilege to work with Linda MacDonald whom most of you know in our course, a family doctor who has trained with me and others for many years, and who now teaches the MBSRPs at our Mindfulness Centre, and see her sweat buckets for a long time as she was racking her brain trying to understand the details of these things. She reminded me of myself, when as a full-fledged psychiatrist with already many years experience I started to study the brain and quickly realized how utterly ignorant I was on the subject. It took me 2 intensive years and a few thousand dollars of courses and training to start feeling a certain mastery of the field. Don’t even mention to me spirituality: I seem to talk a lot about it, and people seem to find inspiration from what I have to say, yet I really know nothing about it, because there is nothing to be known. Such are some of the paradoxes we encounter in this fascinating field of free and easy living. So don’t be too hard on yourself. It will just take time, like anything else that is worthwhile.

5. You don’t have to become experts on the brain, but I hope to provide you with an opportunity to become experts on mindful living. So what I lecture on may seem a bit complex at times, but I always try to boil it down to the essential idea that will help us on our journey of mindfulness. Apply this to the handouts you receive, too. Some of those handouts are detailed and complex, and the idea is not to memorize that, but to use it as reference when you need to go into more detail. In order to aid sifting through all that I have created the slides, which distill what’s most salient. As a means to collectively engage in always keeping the big picture alive, we will regularly have review and consolidation sessions such as the one coming up on January 2nd, 2017, exactly for the purpose of distilling relevance from complexity without ignoring or be afraid of complexity and context. Remember, what we study conceptually needs to be experienced in an embodied way, otherwise, for the purpose of this course that is focused on actual transformation and personal growth, this knowledge remains superficial and useless.

6. The place of not understanding or following is in fact a wonderful place of opportunity. It is the place of our limitation, where growth and expansion beckon. Regard any feelings of inadequacy, incompetence, ‘its too hard’, ‘I can’t do this’, etc. as old conditionings or implicit memories that have outlived their usefulness. When these destructive emotions and thoughts arise, remember the principles of mindful learning: Stay open to novelty, make new distinctions where everything seemed incomprehensible at first, remain sensitive to different contexts, practice developing an awareness of multiple perspectives, and always orient yourself towards the embodied present moment. This encourages the mind to disentangle itself from premature conclusions, categorizations and routinized ways of perceiving and thinking. Certainty eliminates the need to pay attention. Given that the world around us is always in flux, our certainty is an illusion.

7. Mindful learning involves concepts such as intelligent ignorance, flexible thinking, avoidance of premature cognitive commitments and creative uncertainty. It is neither conceptual and conditioned, nor formlessly creative; neither left-brain linguistic, linear and logical, nor right-brain non-verbal and holistic; it is rather a sideways stance of learning, an ‘orthogonal shift’ (Jon Kabat-Zinn) in awareness, where left- and right-brain styles, conceptual and creative processing are intertwined, where learners are conditional in how they take in information, and uncertainty is a friend. Creative uncertainty strengthens our learning and makes the learning experience more enjoyable. The process of learning is the essence of being, not doing.

8. As Leslie Kaminoff points out, Yoga is not about doing the poses; its about undoing what’s in the way of the poses. I see meditation and mindsight in exactly the same way. Meditation is not about doing concentration training; it is about undoing what’s in the way of concentration. Dynamic Mindfulness as I have come to call the approach I developed, does exactly that – by focusing on undoing through surrender to gravity and closure of the doors of avoidance, concentration naturally arises. In this sense the feeling of being stuck, not understanding and wanting to flee the course is simply a gift, the expression of what’s in the way of awareness. By simply embracing it as useful and interesting information about ourselves, we can learn to transcend it and discover the treasures it hides, treasures that have always been there, but we lost touch with them. So I don’t refund; I provide opportunities to refind instead.

So … let’s go! Lets play with what we know, what we don’t know, and what we think we know! Lets experiment with ignorance, stupidity and incompetence, and above all, lets have a lot of fun together learning to unknow!

Copyright © 2016 by Dr. Stéphane Treyvaud. All rights reserved.

Share This Story, Choose Your Platform!

More Blog Posts

Automaticity of the human mind

Human function, action, cognition and behavior under the lens of automaticity

...
Read more >
May 22, 2025

Every novice meditator must understand the mind’s inherent automaticity, forged over eons of evolution to secure survival. The brain, the most intricate structure in the known universe, gives rise to the mind, whose elaborate workings unfold as the most profound phenomenon we can encounter. This complexity reveals our vast potential for self-deception, emphasizing the urgent need to avoid harmful habits early in practice. Cultivating a precise and resilient technical foundation is vital for navigating the mind’s labyrinthine depths. Let us briefly explore the scope of this automaticity, a formidable force we confront as we seek to understand our lives.

Estimating the exact percentage of human action and functioning that is automatic and not conscious is tricky, as it depends on how we define "action," "functioning," and "conscious." However, research in psychology and neuroscience suggests that a significant portion of human behavior and physiological processes operates outside conscious awareness.

1.     Physiological Functions: Most bodily processes—like heart rate, breathing, digestion, and reflexes—are automatic and controlled by the autonomic nervous system. These account for the vast majority of "functioning" in terms of rawprocesses. If we consider all bodily functions (including cellular processes),conscious control might apply to less than 1% of total activity, as most biological operations are involuntary.

2.  Behavioral and Cognitive Actions: When it comes to behavior, decision-making, and cognition, studies suggest that a large portion is driven by automatic processes:

- Psychologist Daniel Kahneman, in his work on System 1 (fast, automatic) and System 2 (slow, deliberate) thinking, suggeststhat System 1 dominates much of our daily behavior. Estimates vary, but someresearchers propose that 95% or more of cognitive processes (e.g., snapjudgments, habits, and intuitive reactions) are automatic.

- Studies on priming and implicit bias (e.g., by John Bargh) show that many decisions, from simple motor actions to complex social behaviors, are influenced by unconscious cues.

- Habitual behaviors, like driving a familiarroute or typing, often occur with minimal conscious input once learned.

3.     Conscious vs. Unconscious Balance: While no precise percentage is universally agreed upon, some neuroscientists estimate that 90–95% of brain activity is unconscious, based on the volume of neural processes handling sensory input, motor control, and background cognition. Conscious actions—like deliberateproblem-solving or focused attention—make up a smaller fraction, perhaps 5–10%of mental activity.

Rough General Estimate: If we combine physiologicaland behavioral aspects, roughly 90–95% of human "action and functioning" (broadly defined) is likely automatic and not conscious. Thisvaries by context—routine tasks lean more automatic, while novel or complex tasksrequire more conscious effort.

Copyright © 2025 by Dr. Stéphane Treyvaud. All rights reserved.

What is it like to be a fly?

An everyday journey from existential nihility to radiant emptiness.

...
Read more >
May 15, 2025

I am drawing upon an instance from my everyday life to illuminate for my students how mindfulness practice in general, and the Mindsight Intensive curriculum in particular—which traces the trajectory of human existence through being and nihility towards absolute nothingness and emptiness—invites us to expand awareness in a very practical way as real, lived reality.

A substantial aspect of this undertaking entails familiarizing oneself with the differences between the realities shaped by the left and right hemispheres of the brain—most notably, the profound insight that the right hemisphere directly presents and reveals reality, whereas the left merely re-presents it as a simplified map of what truly exists.

With this understanding, I explored two contrasting linguistic approaches to articulate the experience: the descriptive, technical language of the left brain, rooted in an 'objective' yet inherently limited perspective, and the imaginative, vivid, and richly contextual language of the right brain, grounded in an embodied, more open-ended viewpoint. The single quotation marks around 'objective' highlight a neurophysiological truth: the brain never perceives reality impartially. Instead, its perceptions are shaped by a drive for certainty, manifested through value judgments that prioritize survival.

My hope is that this exploration may deepen my students’ understanding of the intricate human journey toward wholeness.

1. Left brain perspective

For several consecutive early spring days, a single, distinctive fly appeared to relish the bright sunlight illuminating my bathroom. We have grown familiar, coexisting as two entities engaged in our respective routines. I designate her as "she"—perhaps influenced by the feminine grammatical gender of la mouche (French), la mosca (Italian), and die Fliege (German)—an intuitive attribution rather than a biological assertion. She occasionally positions herself on the curtain railing above my bathtub, observing as I shower. More frequently, she rests on the windowsill, tracking my movements as I shave, and at times briefly alights on my hair for a few seconds. I have been aware of her presence throughout, akin to an inquisitive cohabitant sharing this confined space, but today I intentionally sought a deeper engagement.

She was once again stationed on the windowsill, basking in the sunlight, as I shaved. I approached closely, examining her large, compound eyes, and posed the question, “What is it like to be a fly?” Initially, my cognition activated a predictable analytical response, retrieving stored knowledge about her physiology: a head encasing a compact brain; expansive, multifaceted eyes affording a broad visual field; antennae functioning as olfactory and gustatory sensors; specialized mouthparts adapted for sponging or piercing-sucking; a thorax anchoring six articulated legs, rapid wings, and club-shaped halteres for flight stabilization; and an abdomen housing digestive and reproductive systems, concealed from view. Her exoskeleton, black with muted grey striations, bore a subtle, fur-like texture, as though she had ornamented herself for this encounter—a sizable specimen, impossible to ignore.

Yet, I deliberately suspended this intellectual framework, opting instead to engage her in a silent, receptive state. My question became more personal and changed to “what is it like to be you”? I consciously down-regulated the default mode network—the neural substrate of self-referential thought—relinquishing the ego’s persistent drive to assert its permanence. This ego, in its dualistic framework, projects constructed identities onto the external ‘other’, rendering her so alien that I might, without reflection, swat her away, extinguishing a life deemed insignificant, irritating, or even repellent by that limited perspective.

In this shift, a different entity began to emerge within my awareness—not a mere object, but a presence actively relating to me, exhibiting a form of consciousness distinct yet perceptible. Her curiosity, perhaps reciprocal, prompted her to take flight and settle briefly on my hair. I remained immobile, registering the faint tactile sensation of her tentative exploration of my surface—an interaction probing my identity as much as I sought hers. The contact was transient; she soon returned to the windowsill, fixing her gaze upon me. I speculated that she might, in her own unknowable way, ponder a parallel question: “What is it like to be this massive, terrestrial organism, incapable of flight, beyond my capacity to name?” The perceived separation—me here, her there—dissolved into a unified ‘we’, marked by a tangible exchange of vitality through our shared, living awareness. Though our modes of consciousness diverge, they intersect intimately, each of us enacting existence according to our inherent capacities. Together, we participated in a dynamic interplay, a microcosm of the universe’s unfolding, so affecting that tears briefly surfaced, reflecting regret for the countless instances of inattentiveness lost to automaticity.

This encounter with such a remarkable organism illuminated a progression of awareness. Initially, I had navigated the ‘dark night of the soul’—a dualistic state of nihility, a relative nothingness characterized by existential desolation and the collapse of meaning within a self-other framework. Beyond this, I accessed a non-dual absolute nothingness, a broader mode of awareness where subject-object distinctions dissolve into a unified field of being, devoid of relational constructs. Yet, this was not the terminus; it opened into emptiness—the ultimate awareness mode, a boundless, vibrant expanse where the extraordinary manifests within the ordinary flux of daily existence. This state, achieved through direct presence with this fly, surpasses any chemically induced psychedelic experience in its clarity and depth, revealing a profound interconnectedness inherent in the fabric of life, the extraordinariness of ordinary existence. No answer could ever come close to the tantalizing peace of timeless questions.

2. Right brain vantage point

For several radiant spring mornings, a singular, remarkable fly has basked in the golden sunlight flooding my bathroom. We have become familiar companions, each merrily tending to our daily rites. At times, she—yes, she, anointed feminine by the lilting echoes of la mouche, la mosca, die Fliege, a soft intuition humming through language—perches atop the curtain railing above my bathtub, a silent witness to my shower’s misty veil. More often, she lingers on the windowsill, her gaze fixed upon me as I shave, now and then darting to alight for a fleeting instant upon my hair. I’ve felt her presence all along—a curious housemate in this shared sanctuary—but today, I vowed to bridge the chasm between us.

There she rested once more, cradled in the sun’s warm embrace upon the windowsill, watching me wield my razor with quiet intent. I leaned closer, peering into her vast, prismatic eyes—kaleidoscopes of a secret world—and murmured, “What is it like to be a fly?” At first, my mind thrummed with the familiar pulse of knowledge: her head, a miniature cathedral of instinct; those grand, jeweled eyes unveiling a boundless vista; antennae, fragile wands of scent and savor; mouthparts sculpted for sipping or piercing; her thorax, a delicate frame bearing six crooked legs, wings that shimmer with thunderous speed, and halteres, poised like a dancer’s plumb line; her abdomen, a veiled chamber of life’s mysteries. She gleamed, black as night with faint grey stripes, her form cloaked in a gossamer sheen, as though she’d adorned herself for this tender rendezvous.

This time, like as many other times as I can possibly honour in daily life, I let this torrent of facts dissolve, beckoning her to meet me in the hush of silence. The question changed to become more personal: “What is it like to be you?” I stilled the restless clamor of my mind, loosening the ego’s tenacious hold—that brittle self, desperate to cling to its mirage of eternity, casting endless conceptual shadows upon the being before me. So remote she might appear, I could, in a careless flicker, swat her away, deeming her life a trifling annoyance, a speck of disdain. But no—a different essence began to bloom within my consciousness.

A presence unfurled, no longer separate but alive with me, awake in her own cryptic grace, her curiosity a mirror to my own. Suddenly, she soared, settling upon my hair. I stood statue-still, captivated by the faint tickle of her pilgrimage across my scalp, a gentle quest into the enigma of my existence. The moment was ephemeral; she soon returned to her sun-gilded throne, gazing back at me. Perhaps she mused, too: “What is it like to be this lumbering, wingless colossus, a riddle beyond my silent tongue?” The gulf between us—me here, her there—dissolved into a luminous we, tethered by a pulsing filament of shared aliveness. Our ways of knowing diverged, yet entwined, each of us threading life’s arc with singular devotion. Together, we spun a strand in the vast loom of the cosmos, a dance so piercing that tears brimmed in my eyes, lamenting a lifetime’s moments lost to the fog of unawareness.

In that tranquil void, beside this astonishing fly, I brushed against an abyss beyond sorrow—a stillness forged in the crucible of the soul’s dark night, rising into the infinite embrace of nothingness. From there, it was but a tender plunge into the world’s embrace, a surrender that let peaceful nothingness blossom into vibrant emptiness—a radiant field teeming with the miraculous veiled in the everyday. This quiet epiphany, outshining the wildest psychedelic odyssey imaginable, unveiled life’s timeless poetry: unspoken, extraordinary, woven into the ordinary cadence of days. The nameless question remains.

Copyright © 2025 by Dr. Stéphane Treyvaud. All rights reserved.

Searching Everywhere But Where It Counts

Forgetting that we have a mind.

...
Read more >
October 12, 2024

Before you worry about symptoms such as depression and anxiety and how to improve or get rid of them, before you get your blood boiling arguing with people who can't deal with anything beyond their own viewpoint, before you develop and become ensconced in your own opinions, before you vilify who disagrees with you, before you shake your head wondering how seemingly obvious facts cannot be agreed upon, before you assume you have no blind spots, before you despair that crowds never learn from history, before you become bitter at humanity's collective stupidity, before you get passionate about religion, mythology, and archetypes, before all that, wouldn't it make sense to inquire into the source of all of it - these symptoms, views, opinions, thoughts, actions, distortions and, frankly, miseries?

While it does not take rocket science to realize that the source of it all is the embodied human mind, for most, embarking on its exploration is at best a big challenge, at worst insurmountable, non-sensical or incomprehensible. How many times have you heard nonsense like “I don’t believe in psychology”, as if the existence of the moon were a matter of belief? How often do patients enter their physician’s office complaining of being anxious or depressed, and are sent home with a prescription without one question that would try to understand how their mind creates such suffering? Many people, including professionals who should know better, live and act as if they had no mind.

The mind is the source of all subjective phenomena and experiences, and we are astoundingly unaware of it. Our mind’s task is to ensure survival and the propagation of our species, not to ensure we live our best life. To this end, it needs to be efficient, rather than concerned about maximizing its potential. Efficiency results by pairing down information processing to the bare minimum. Embedded in the way mind functions are mechanisms that cause reality distortions, delusions, wild beliefs, and a profound obliviousness of one’s own ignorance. Whether we like it or not, our mind drives our lives like our heart pumps blood through our veins. The universe's natural processes have caused us to evolve that way, and for better or worse, we are stuck with a mind that functions sub-optimally as it creates profound reality distortions that seem at first blush to have successfully allowed us to multiply and propagate towards earth dominance. In the long run, however, it turns out that humanity may end up stampeding dangerously close to extinction. To thrive both individually and as a species we must come to terms with our rather dangerous mind and train ourselves to use it beyond its basic survival mode by accessing its inherent potential evolution has graciously also built into it. That takes work, training, effort and patience.

Our human mind provides the capacity for reflection. The mirror reflects what’s in front of it, meaning that as reality beams itself onto the mirror’s surface, the mirror beams it back to us as an image we can then examine from the outside. Notice how what gets examined by looking at the mirror is not reality itself, but an image of it. Our brain provides a similar process in the form of consciousness, whereby it maps reality in a virtual form we then can observe and manipulate. However, while the mirror reflects reality exactly as it is, the virtual reality consciousness creates is not only a map of reality, but that map is modified into a new creation. The brain as mapper functions as our central relationship organ that enables us to reflexively develop a relationship to reality and ourselves by having access to a virtual, mapped and modified reality we can ponder and manipulate. This is how we are self-aware.

As an aside, the mind is more than the creator of a virtual adaptation of reality we can reflexively relate to and have a relationship with. It can transcend self-awareness, and knowingly experience reality and awareness without the detour of mapped mirroring duality. That is the shift from observation to being, from knowing we exist in a universe to realizing we are the universe. More about that in another context.

The eye has a blind spot where the optic nerve enters the retina, but you don’t see it. You have the impression of enjoying a seamless field of vision without two black holes in the middle, even though the holes are there. The brain manages to fill in the missing information to make the field seem seamless. Extrapolate that to the whole brain to realize that to function effectively for everyday survival our brain adapts our field of consciousness in two ways: It fills what’s missing to provide a sense of continuity and simplifies available information to not overwhelm you. It hides blind spots from you to provide continuity and withholds information to ensure efficiency. Both these mechanisms distort reality to ensure survival, while simultaneously laying the foundations for ignorance and suffering.

We each have many blind spots, but the core blind spot affecting us all is the proclivity to live as if we had no mind. We use our minds without realizing the extent to which our experience of reality is created by our mind. Without our conscious knowledge our brain creates the reality we experience. We don’t notice that the reality we experience is our brain’s creation. We mistake our brain’s constructions for reality. This results in a dangerous situation, in which we ignore the fact that our experience is subjectively constructed. We mistakenly believe that what we see and experience is automatically true, and because it seems true it seems real, and because it seems real it cannot be changed. Our primordial blind spot towards the brain’s constructions robs us of freedom of choice, of the power of clear view, wise discernment, and respectfully compassionate mutual understanding.

Our mind’s constructions seem so real that we hold on to them for dear life and want to shove them down other people’s throats without exploring their veracity. We get strongly identified with what we believe we know, emotions take over, and the capacity to hear each other vanishes. Identification with mind processes is the single most destructive problem in the way humans use their minds. Emotions suffocate the mind’s spaciousness to freely consider, question, doubt and explore, and before we know it, we are in conflict. If we cannot agree on facts, emotions drive us to use force to impose our views instead of inquiring more deeply into the divergent realities, and if necessary, compromising to try to resolve complexities. Force can take the form of yelling and screaming at each other, or legal and physical action.

The reality our mind constructs and we can have a relationship with, is in fact threefold. We first have objective reality, which is what happens in the universe independent of whether we know about it or there is anyone around to witness it. This reality consists of energy flow that is independent of how our brains and minds construct reality, and therefore as far from information as energy flow can get. The black death virus killed thousands of people without them knowing what viruses are or being able to see them. Although this is the easiest reality to agree upon, like in the case of flat-earthers, emotions still manage to cause distortions of objective facts.

Subjective reality is our own private experience nobody else has access to. This energy flow is entirely within as a construction by our own brain and mind. Although it is largely independent of objective reality, it is profoundly shaped by interactions with others. Even if everyone denies that I am in pain, if I experience pain, it is totally real for me. That is a difficult reality to agree upon, because seeing it from the outside requires trust and our capacity for empathy.

Then there is intersubjective reality, which is the reality of stories. This energy flow is deeply symbolic in the sense that language and stories are symbolic, therefore experienced as information flow, and a mutual co-creation with others. It is the reality that emerges through mutual narrative construction and is neither objective, nor subjective. It only exists in the interpersonal realm containing people who are willing to participate in it by accepting the shared reality. One such reality is money, but there are many others such as all collective ideas we can share. Money means nothing and has no reality unless it is shared in the interpersonal space. This is also a difficult reality to deal with, because it depends on the mutual capacity to regulate the multilayered energy flow between our intuition, our emotions and our intellect. When that occurs, empathy and clear insight become possible, allowing a degree of harmony within the intersubjective dance of energy and information flow to emerge. Any dance couple may dance a Tango, but those in conflict will not be able to present a harmonious dance.

To manage these three realities we each have a relationship with, requires a good deal of self-awareness and emotional regulation many people don’t have. Much of the time, the mind remains transparent like air to our eyes, invisible or not known, yet profoundly determining how we relate to real reality and live our lives. Like children playing in a house on fire, we remain oblivious to the many ways our ignorance of mind causes suffering and destruction all around.      

Copyright © 2024 by Dr. Stéphane Treyvaud. All rights reserved.

Latest Blog

Novel ideas and information on what’s  coming straight to your inbox! Subscribe to my newsletter now.