A lateral thinking perspective on mindfulness and meditation: “sensefulness” or “present sense”

Dave Cortright
2 min readNov 10, 2022

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Mindfulness is a misnomer*. The goal of mindfulness and meditation is to let go of thoughts of the past and the future—to be fully in the present moment, with complete attention on our sensory input. You want to get out of your head and into your body and senses.

In fact, any time language comes up in your mind, you are no longer in the present. You are interpreting and labeling the sensory input. The goal is to focus on the raw stream of sensory data and do absolutely no processing, labeling or judging of any kind.

“Sensefulness” is an apt term. But what I like even better is “present sense”. It parallels the commonly used term “present tense.” And it reinforces the goal of being in the present moment with attention fully on what you are sensing right now.

Your [thinking] mind is an instrument; a tool. It is there to be used for a specific task, and when the task is completed, you lay it down.

—Eckhart Tolle in “The Power of Now”

* tangentially, mindlessness is likewise a misnomer. People acting mindlessly are often lost in their thoughts and not paying attention to what’s going on around them. They are too much in their mind and barely in their senses. It’s no wonder we struggle to meditate when our language has these concepts completely reversed.

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Dave Cortright
Dave Cortright

Written by Dave Cortright

Professional coach, effective altruist and audaciously optimistic about helping to fix the global mental health crisis. https://designingthis.life

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