Over the last few decades, the idea of “now” as the only reference point in our lives has been popularized almost to death, an idea that, although attractive, is too often devalued and distorted in such a way that it is presented as disconnecting. of a past that has already passed and not worry about a future that has not yet arrived.
However, this interpretation of “now” as an ephemeral moment of total carelessness and even irresponsibility does not consider that neither the past has already passed nor the future has arrived, nor, much less, does it consider that the “now” in What must be present is an extended “now” that consciously includes both the past and the future.
As philosopher Tim Freke says, the past does not pass, but rather “stacks up” and, therefore, each new element (each experience, each thought, each memory) that is added to that conglomerate of the past changes the entire past. After all, we can only access the past from the present and, as a result, the past is constantly changing.
And as MIT's Dr. Otto Scharmer teaches, the future does not arrive but emerges. In some ways, the future is always already there as a potential adjacent reality that we only have access to when we expand our consciousness to include it. In other words, the future is not a chronological event (the “tomorrow”), but rather an expanded consciousness.
Therefore, the idea of being totally present in the present (sometimes known as mindfulness), far from being a call to a life unconcerned by previous or subsequent actions or circumstances, is, in fact, a call to reach such level of presence that synoptically includes mutually interconnected perceptions of the past, present and future.
This is not something that is learned by watching videos, much less through mere words. As we said before, it is a convocation, a call together (literally) to an experience. Nobody learns to swim by watching swimming videos. Nobody understands what love is by reading the definition of “love” in the dictionary.
In this time of constant, profound, unresolved, unexpected and irreversible changes that anticipate the arrival of a new stage in human history, locking oneself in an ephemeral “now” (represented in the jump from one message to another on social networks) ) is an irresponsible defense mechanism against the responsibility that is required to co-create the new future and, therefore, to transform the past.
Being present in the present does not mean, as is commonly believed, submitting to banality, superficiality and triviality. On the contrary, being present in the present means, paradoxically, distancing oneself from that present in order to be able to see and understand it from both the past and the future, that is, from a broad perspective that allows us to examine and challenge the assumptions and underlying structures that shape the present.
Being committed to the present does not mean disconnecting from or ignoring the present. Rather, it refers to mindful awareness leading to deeper insights.