Thoughts are conditioned events that arise and pass naturally without a central owner, and by observing them as transient phenomena rather than identifying with them as 'I' or 'mine,' one can develop a quiet freedom and clarity in the mind.
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The arising and passing of thoughts without ownershipAjouté :
The teaching on the arising and passing of thoughts without ownership invites a quiet shift in how one relates to the mind. In discourses such as the Satipatthana Sutta and the Anattalakkhana Sutta, the Buddha points out that what we call “thought” is not a solid entity belonging to a person, but a conditioned event that appears and fades. When one sits in stillness and observes carefully, thoughts can be seen arising on their own, without being summoned, and disappearing without needing to be pushed away. This observation weakens the deeply rooted habit of identifying with every mental movement as “I” or “mine.” As attention becomes steady, a practitioner begins to notice that thoughts follow causes. A memory may trigger a feeling, a feeling may give rise to a chain of ideas, and those ideas may dissolve just as quickly when conditions change. There is no central owner directing this process; it unfolds naturally, like clouds forming and dispersing in the sky. When this is clearly seen, the burden of controlling the mind softens. One no longer struggles to stop thoughts or to chase pleasant ones, but instead learns to remain aware, allowing each mental event to come and go without resistance.
In this way, a quiet freedom begins to emerge. When thoughts are no longer taken as self, their power to disturb diminishes. Even difficult or restless thinking loses its grip when it is seen as transient and impersonal. The mind becomes less entangled in stories and more rooted in direct awareness. This is not a state of emptiness in the sense of absence, but a clarity in which thoughts are known simply as passing phenomena. Within this clarity, there is a growing sense of ease, as the practitioner rests not in the content of the mind, but in the knowing of it.
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