Are We There Yet?

kidsincarWe had the Sunday Introduction to Meditation Class at Yoga Bliss today: several guided meditations and a period of mindful walking.  We began by feeling our bodies in the areas of the six points of posture and then entrained our attention on the sensations of breathing.

Students used concentration techniques such as counting individual breaths to sustain their concentration.  While walking we maintained focus by taking a step upon inhaling and landing a step upon exhaling.  Nevertheless, we all lost our attention at times. In his book, Buddhism Without Beliefsauthor and meditation teacher, Stephen Batchelor describes the mind’s inherent restlessness:

Focused awareness is both calm and clear.  Just as calmness is prevented by restlessness and distraction, so clarity is undermined by boredom and lethargy.  Drifting between these two poles, we spend much of our time either slightly hyper or slightly depressed.  . . . Distraction drugs us into forgetfulness.  Even when we yearn to be focused on something meaningful, it erupts again.  We cannot switch it off – and the more frustrated we get the worse it becomes.

He suggests embracing whatever mind state we find ourselves in:  accept this is how things are right now.  “Acceptance might even lead to understanding what it is that we’re running from.”  We could even bring a sense of compassion, patience or tenderness to our experience – we all share these very human mind states.

As a kid, I remember nagging my parents during our long road trips between California and Idaho:  Are we there yet?  As an adult I now wonder whether There is the place where we find ourselves suspended between restlessness and boredom.  It’s a place where we can be curious and open:  a place where our questions are as valued as our answers.  I sometimes feel the pull of resistance to experiences that I’ve framed as an obligations.  I want to let go of what I think the experience will be and just jump in.  Perhaps this is the journey we take together in meditation.  We take the plunge and see what happens.

Sunday Introduction to Meditation Class 58 Homework

Being in Silence

buddhi-paint-sky-stars-shineWe had the Sunday Introduction to Meditation Class at Yoga Bliss yesterday: several guided meditations and a period of mindful walking.  We entrained our awareness on breathing while listening to silence – even the silence that exists within sound. Our practice was inspired by Matthew Sanford‘s experience of silence in healing after a traumatic injury that left him paralyzed at thirteen.

In The Body’s Grace, the interview with On Being radio journalist, Krista Tippett, Matthew describes the silences of separation, connection and integration.  In his  book, Waking: A Memoir of Trauma and Transcendencehe recalls an inner silence he was forced into from which he eventually accessed a powerful yet subtle mind body connection.

In principle, my experience is not so different from yours, it is only more extreme. … My mind-body relationship changed in an instant — the time it took for my back to break. But the changing relationship between mind and body is a feature of everyone’s life. We are all leaving our bodies — this is the inevitable arc of living. Death cannot be avoided; neither can the inward silence that comes with the aging process.

I now experience a different, more subtle connection between mind and body. It does not require that I flex muscles. It does not dissipate in the presence of increasing inward silence.

… It does require, however, that I seek more profoundly within my own experience and do so with an open mind. It means that I must reach intuitively into what may feel like darkness.

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Breathing in the Middle of Things

Serving-Hospice-Patients-and-Caregivers-300x212We had the Sunday Introduction to Meditation Class at Yoga Bliss yesterday: several guided meditations and a period of mindful walking. We began with the practice of “Getting to Know Your Breath,” from Anne Cushman‘s new book, Moving Into Meditation.  We sensed breathing by “homing in” on four aspects:  location, length, texture and spacing between breaths.

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Sensing In & Out

Owl WomanWe had the Sunday Introduction to Meditation Class at Yoga Bliss today: several guided meditations and a period of mindful walking.   We began with the first foundation of mindfulness: awareness of the body and, in particular, the senses.   I drew the guidance, Feeling Your Sense Gateways, from Anne Cushman‘s new book, Moving Into Meditation.  Seeing hearing, smelling, tasting and touching are all embodied experiences – like yoga – which we can include in our mindfulness practice.

In this practice, you consciously feel and relax the sense gateways of your eyes, ears, nose, mouth and skin.  Have you ever tried to feel deep inside your ears?  How do you relax your eyes?  What happens when you simply “allow” your senses to receive stimulation?  It’s interesting to notice the difference between actively pursuing stimulation and passively receiving sensory experiences.  We talked about how loud the room became in our stillness.  You can appreciate the energy it takes to screen out the continuous “noise” of the world in order to focus on something of your own choosing.

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This Precious Life

artworks-000052462195-mtdjco-t200x200We had the Sunday Introduction to Meditation Class at Yoga Bliss yesterday: a formal sitting meditation and a period of mindful walking and a Metta Meditation or loving kindness practice.  Our inner silence seemed to magnify the external noises around us:  cars, sirens, walking, talking from the street and neighboring businesses, whirling blades of the fan, floors creaking and even the subtle rustling of material as we adjusted our posture.

Time seemed suspended as we slowly paced the room during walking meditation.  One student later reported that for the first time in her life she fully appreciated the preciousness of the tree growing on the very busy street outside our window.  It withstands the harsh environment of air and noise pollution as it reaches for the light and does its best to be part of the very planet’s lungs:  taking in carbon dioxide and releasing oxygen.

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Alive & Playing

Dance & SingWe had the Sunday Introduction to Meditation Class at Yoga Bliss yesterday: a formal sitting meditation and a period of mindful walking and a Metta Meditation or loving kindness practice. Students shared about their difficulties in trying to adhere to my instructions, the physical pain of sitting still for so long, the difficult states of mind including agitation, racing thoughts, lethargy and sleepiness.  Many of us approach meditation as yet another task to be done in order to achieve a benefit or goal.   We believe we have to work hard in order to succeed. Continue reading

Safe, Content, Strong, Living with Ease

Calling all AngelsWe had the Sunday Introduction to Meditation Class at Yoga Bliss yesterday: two segments of formal sitting meditation and a period of mindful walking. After walking we practiced a beautiful loving kindness meditation inspired by the teachings of Dr. Sylvia Boorstein, author and founding teacher of Spirit Rock Meditation Center.

I invited students to either sit on the floor, a chair or lie down for the last meditation.  We talked about approaching meditation in a struggle-free way.  This means letting go of trying to achieve or attain whatever goal or ideal that may have drawn us into practice in the first place.  Yes – another paradox!  How can we use our motivation to stop striving?

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Nurturing

blossoms-2We had the Sunday Introduction to Meditation Class at Yoga Bliss yesterday: two segments of formal sitting meditation and a period of mindful walking. After walking we practiced a beautiful loving kindness meditation inspired by the teachings of Dr. Sylvia Boorstein, author and founding teacher of Spirit Rock Meditation Center.  Sylvia seems to be a born nurturer.  She introduces herself as a wife, mother, grandmother and then goes on to name her other occupations.  She encourages students to practice meditation in a way that nurtures those qualities that most enhance our well being and the well being of those around us.

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