There is no such thing as now. The line where the ‘now’ exists is between the future and the past. And that line has no thickness. Are we really alive if our entire perception is only of events that have happened in the past?
But what is the now? It is a sliver of time that has no thickness. It is a point in time that well… has no length of time. 0 picoseconds. Thus does it even exist? Your entire perception is of things that only occurred in the past. When you say ‘right now’, immediately the now you are referring to is already the past. And like you say, the past doesn’t exist anymore either.
There’s a bit of lag ofc. Like when you strike a piano key and the sound takes a while to reach your ears. We live in perpetual lag of a fraction of second with respect to the present moment, but that’s what our brain reacts to when a vase falls to the ground or when you have to catch a ball. That’s our present. I meditate and I can imprison my conscience to that, eliminating all the rest, all the thoughts, worries, remembrances. Ofc that’s not something I’m able to maintain for long periods of time but that’s what I mean when I say staying in the present moment.
The world of a second ago no longer exists either.
There is no such thing as now. The line where the ‘now’ exists is between the future and the past. And that line has no thickness. Are we really alive if our entire perception is only of events that have happened in the past?
It’s the opposite: the past doesn’t exist anymore and the future is only imagined. All there is is the now.
But what is the now? It is a sliver of time that has no thickness. It is a point in time that well… has no length of time. 0 picoseconds. Thus does it even exist? Your entire perception is of things that only occurred in the past. When you say ‘right now’, immediately the now you are referring to is already the past. And like you say, the past doesn’t exist anymore either.
There’s a bit of lag ofc. Like when you strike a piano key and the sound takes a while to reach your ears. We live in perpetual lag of a fraction of second with respect to the present moment, but that’s what our brain reacts to when a vase falls to the ground or when you have to catch a ball. That’s our present. I meditate and I can imprison my conscience to that, eliminating all the rest, all the thoughts, worries, remembrances. Ofc that’s not something I’m able to maintain for long periods of time but that’s what I mean when I say staying in the present moment.