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- You are not your mind. Tolle reminds us that our internal narrators shouldnât be tied to our identity nor our sense of self.
- Mindfulness, enhances our presence in the moment by allowing the present moment to be what is, rather than trying to escape it or changing it through our thoughts or actions.Â
- The pain-body. The âpain-bodyâ as Tolle puts it, is when our emotions get the best of us, driving us to lashed out, its the unprocessed emotional pain, that tend to manifest into self-hatred, anxiety, depression, blame, fear, emotional drama, and so on. The pain body can also challenge our ability to live more conscious and awakened lives.
The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle  is a guide that will give you a glimpse into eternity, though the path is practical and requires some effort.
Here are some additional key takeaways from the book The Power of Now by Eckhart TolleÂ
Chapter 1Â
YOU ARE NOT YOUR MIND: The greatest obstacle to Enlightenment
Tolle explains that enlightenment is a state of wholeness. To put it more clearly, itâs a state that is essentially you, and yet, it is much higher than you.
He points out that, âBeing can be felt, however it can never be understood mentally.
You can know it only when the mind is still, and your attention is fully and intensely in the Now.âÂ
When youâve tapped into the Now, says Tolle, âyou realize the things that truly matter, like beauty, love, creativity, joy, and inner peace â all arise from beyond the mind.
The moment you start watching the thinker, a higher level of consciousness becomes activated.ââ Eckhart Tolle.
Chapter 2
FREEING YOURSELF FROM YOUR MIND
Listen to the voice in your head. Says Tolle. âBe there as the witnessing presence.â
That voice youâll often hear⌠aka the monkey mind, belongs to your conditioned mind. Itâs the result of all historyâthe collective cultural mindset we inherited growing up.
Do not judge or condemn what you hear. Explains Tolle, because doing so would mean the same voice has returned through the back door.
Tolle says, âYouâll soon realize: there is the voice, and here I am listening to it, watching it.â
In your everyday life, you can practice this by taking any routine activity thatâs usually a means to an end and giving it your fullest attention, without judging your emotions.
Chapter 3
ENLIGHTENMENT: RISING ABOVE THOUGHT
Eckhart Tolle describes the mind as an instrument. A tool thatâs there to be used for specific tasks. When the job is completed, you lay it down.
He points out that approximately 80 to 90 percent of peopleâs thinking are repetitive and useless. Not to mention, these thoughts are often negative as well as harmful.
âIf you observe the mind,â explains Tolle, âyouâll find this to be true.â
The present moment holds the key to liberation. But you cannot find the present moment as long as you are in your mind. â Eckhart Tolle
Eckhart reminds us that enlightenment means rising above thoughts, not falling back to a level below thoughts. (e.g., the level of an animal or a plant.)
Chapter 4
EMOTION: THE BODYâS REACTION TO YOUR MINDÂ
Tolle believes that emotionare the bodyâs reaction to the mind. Or you might even say, its a reflection of the mind in the body. That is also to say, emotion arises where mind and body meet.
Strong emotions, for instance, can even cause changes in the biochemistry of the body.
If youâre having difficulties tapping into these emotions, Tolle advises that you start by feeling the body from within. Focus your attention on the inner energy field of your body.
Chapter 5
EMOTION: LOVE, JOY, and PEACE
Love, joy, and peace are the three main aspects of deep states of being. Writes Tolle.
In other words, they are the foundation of the inner connectedness with Being, since they all arises from beyond the mind.
Eckhart Tolle points out that, emotions come from the dualistic mind. (Another word for thinking in good/bad, up/down, black/white, negative/positive, or the law of opposites.)
Whatever the present moment contains, explains Tolle, âaccept it as if you had chosen it.â
Always work with it rather than against it.
Make It your friend and ally, not your enemy.â
Chapter 6
PAST PAIN:DISSOLVING THE PAIN-BODY
Tolle clarifies that, âAs long as you cannot access the power of the Now, every emotional pain you experience leaves behind a residue of pain that lives on in you.â
This includes the pain you suffered as a child; and the unconsciousness of the world you and I were born into.
So, watch out for any sign of unhappiness in yourself, in whatever form it may be, because if you donât consciously face and deal with the pain body, youâll be forced to relieve it repeatedly.
The Two Levels to Your Pain
There are two levels to your pain:
- The pain youâre creating now.Â
- The pain from the past that still lives in your mind and body.
Therefore be present enough to watch the pain body directly and feel its energy field within you. By doing so, It can no longer control your thinking or behavior.
Everything is shown up by being exposed to the light, and whatever is exposed to the light itself becomes light.âââEckhart Tolle.
Chapter 7
EGO IDENTIFICATION WITH THE PAIN-BODY
Tolle explains that once you have understood the basic principle of being presentâ as the watcher of what happens inside you â and you âunderstandâ it by experiencing it â then you have the most potent transformational tool at your disposal. âHowever,â says Tolle, âthis is not to deny that you may encounter intense inner resistance from moment to moment.â
He points out that this happens because you had made an unhappy self out of your âpain bodyâ and believed that this mind-made fiction is who you are.
Tolle also reminds us that getting rid of old false identity wonât be easy.
Youâll be tempted to be in pain. âIn the pain-bodyâ,âthan to take a leap into the unknown, and risk losing the familiar unhappy self.
Tolle points out that âThis is the purest form of addiction.â
So If this applies to you, observe the resistance within yourself.
It might take a while for you to release the identity youâve attached to the pain body, but itâs worth it.
As Tolle puts it:
Itâs the unconscious fear of losing your identity thatâll likely create strong resistance to any dis-identification. âEckhart Tolle.
Chapter 8
THE ORIGIN OF FEAR
Tolle states that fears come in many forms: unease, worry, anxiety, nervousness, tension, dread, phobia⌠you name it.
Tolle also realized that these kind of psychological fears are always something that might happen, as opposed to not something that is happeningââânow.
He says âYou are in the here and now, while your mind is in the future.â As a result, this creates an anxiety gap.
Watch out for any defensiveness that you may feel within yourself. Says Tolle.
Ask yourself âWhat am I defending?
Is it a false identity?
An image in your mind?Â
A fictitious entity?
What is it?
And once you get to the bottom of it, make this pattern conscious, until youâre able to dis-identify with it.
In the light of your consciousness, the unconscious habit will then quickly dissolve.âââEckhart Tolle.
Chapter 9
THE EGOâS SEARCH FOR WHOLENESS
As long as the egoic mind runs your life, says Tolle, âyou cannot truly be at ease, at peace, or truly fulfilled.â
The reason why is that the ego is a derived sense of self, and it must identify with external things.
Tolle clarifies that these âexternal thingsâ are notâââyou.
Just to be clear here, Tolle is certainly not asking you to believe that your identity cannot be found in any of those things.
Heâs simply saying that If you live long enough, youâll know the truth of it for yourself.
âYou will know it at the latest,â Tolle elaborates, âwhen you feel death approaching.â
Death stripped away all that is not you. Writes Tolle. And the secret of life is to âdie before you dieââââand find that there is no deathâ.âEckhart Tolle.
Chapter 10
MOVING DEEPLY INTO THE NOWÂ [Donât seek yourself in your mind]Â
According to Tolle, the egoâs needs are endless.
The ego often feels vulnerable and threatened; therefore it lives in fear and wants.Â
And so identifying with the mind will likely create a false self.Â
As Jesus once said, âYou become a branch cut off from the vine.â
The problems of the mind cannot be solved on the level of the mind.â Eckhart Tolle.
Your true self, however, is rooted in Being.
The mind in itself is not dysfunctional, explains Tolle.
It is a beautiful tool.
âHowever,â says Tolle, âdysfunction sets in when you seek yourself in it and mistake it for who you are.â By doing so, It then becomes the egoic mind that takes over your whole life.
Chapter 11Â
END THE DELUSION OF TIME
Tolle noticed that to be identified with your mind is to be trapped in time.
As a result, this creates an endless preoccupation with the past, future and an unwillingness to honor and acknowledge the present moment. Allowing it to be.
And the reason why itâs hard to let go, according to Tolle, is that the past gives us an identity, and the future holds the promise of salvation, of fulfillment in whatever form. But, of course, explains Tolle, both are illusions.
Tolle believes that the more you are focused on time: past and future â the more youâll miss the Now. Which is the most precious thing there is.
Tolle states that âThere was never a time when your life was not now, nor will there ever be.â Secondly, Now is the only time that can take you beyond the limited confines of the mind. It is your single access point to the timeless and formless realm of Being.â
The eternal present is the space within which your whole life unfolds, the one factor that remains constant. âEckhart Tolle.
Chapter 12Â
THE KEY TO THE SPIRITUAL DIMENSION
Eckhart Tolle explains that the key to the spiritual dimension is through self-observation.
By noticing what itâs like to be this presence being that you are, more presence will automatically come into your life.
Donât judge or analyze what you observe.
Watch the thought, feel the emotion, and observe the reaction.
The moment you realize you are not presentâââyou are present.
Chapter 13
FINDING THE LIFE UNDERNEATH YOUR LIFE SITUATION
Tolle suggests that you Ignore your life situation for a while, instead pay attention to your life.
For what you call âYour lifeâ explains Tolle, should be more accurately called âYour life situation.â
Whatâs the difference?
Well, as Tolle puts it, âYour life situation exists in time.
While your life is now.â
âŚ
Your life situation is mind-stuff.
Your life is real.
âItâs not about solving your problems,â explains Tolle, âItâs about realizing there are no problems.â
Focus your attention on the Now and tell me what problem you have at this moment. As there are no problems in the now, there is no fear either.âââEckhart Tolle.