HACKER Q&A
📣 desertraven

Remaining mindful while engaged in intellectual or social activities?


I’m defining mindfulness as the state of being aware of the impressions, thoughts and sensations arising in the moment.

While meditating, this is easily achievable. Though I quickly become swept away in conversation or programming.

Any advice?


  👤 NickRandom Accepted Answer ✓
I have a diagnosed condition called Dissociative Identity Disorder[1] and what you are describing as desirable (a mindful awareness of inner emotions during conversations etc) is a state that with my condition means that I would technically be in a dissociative state - i.e. observing events unfolding in the third person (sorta aka 'viewer' mode) since to observe ones thoughts as they are formed means you are not fully part of them. One of my shrinks assured me that this 'was not a good thing ('normal') ' thing to do mainly because but also because if you do so you miss out on the ‘thrills’ of life (i.e. Experiencing emotions rather than Observing emotions).

Inner/Self reflection is a great thing and I’ve found it one of the many helpful things about doing (my own cobbled together form) of meditation and it is nice to see that others are also exploring thoughts and ideas as their self understanding progresses.

There is however a concept called being centred / grounded. As far as I understand it that is the sense of when all things are humming along in an inner symphony of state aka when all dials in the green and all the horses/monkeys are pulling equally and together and things just …. flow. ‘I’ cease to exist and instead become the ‘moment’.

I too have wondered about the ‘how to bring that sense of inner observation’ back with me from a meditative state so what bamurphymac1 said is a good answer with some good solutions

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dissociative_identity_disorder


👤 bamurphymac1
Boring answer: More time on the cushion ~= more moments of insight off of it.

Hacker answer: use timers, silent alarms on your phone, etc. depending on the circumstances to redirect your attention and set intentions for your activity.


👤 codingdave
You have a different definition than a therapist would give - mindfulness is often defined as being present in the moment. The meditative practice of being aware of thoughts and feelings is a tool to stay mindful - to catch how you are thinking, and direct it back to the moment if/when you drift. But getting caught in the moment and fully engaged in a conversation or programming is being mindful. Mindfulness is about engaging, not holding oneself at a distance and watching.

👤 dizzydiz
For me, your first definition is meditation itself. I’ve always considered mindfulness as being engrossed in something without distracting thoughts.

When I’m “lost” in programming or conversation, I feel I’m doing it right :)