It is well to
recognize that when you start on a meditation practice, you are entering a
totally different dimension of reality. Normally in life we put a great deal of
effort into achieving things, and there is a lot of struggle involved, whereas
meditation is just the opposite, it is a break from how we normally operate.
Meditation is simply
a question of being, of melting, like a piece of butter left in the sun. It has
nothing to do with whether or not you "know" anything about it, in
fact, each time you practice meditation it should be fresh, as if it were
happening for the very first time. You just quietly sit, your body still, your
speech silent, your mind at ease, and allow thoughts to come and go, without
letting them play havoc on you. If you need something to do, then watch the
breathing. This is a very simple process. When you are breathing out, know that
you are breathing out. When you breath in, know that you are breathing in,
without supplying any kind of extra commentary or internalized mental gossip,
but just identifying with the breath. That very simple process of mindfulness
processes your thoughts and emotions, and then, like an old skin being shed,
something is peeled off and freed.
Usually people tend
to relax the body by concentrating on different parts. Real relaxation comes
when you relax from within, for then everything else will ease itself out quite
naturally.
When you begin to
practice, you center yourself, in touch with your "soft spot", and
just remain there. You need not focus on anything in particular to begin with.
Just be spacious, and allow thoughts and emotions to settle. If you do so, then
later, when you use a method such as watching the breath, your attention will
more easily be on your breathing. There is no particular point on the breath on
which you need to focus, it is simply the process of breathing. Twenty-five
percent of your attention is on the breath, and seventy-five percent is relaxed.
Try to actually identify with the breathing, rather than just watching it. You
may choose an object, like a flower, for example, to focus upon. Sometimes you
are taught to visualize a light on the forehead, or in the heart. Sometimes a
sound or a mantra can be used. But at the beginning it is best to simply be
spacious, like the sky. Think of yourself as the sky, holding the whole
universe.
When you sit, let
things settle and allow all your discordant self with its ungenuineness and
unnaturalness to disolve, out of that rises your real being. You experience an
aspect of yourself which is more genuine and more authentic-the
"real" you. As you go deeper, you begin to discover and connect with
your fundamental goodness.
The whole point of
meditation is to get used to the that aspect which you have forgotten. In
Tibetan "meditation" means "getting used to". Getting used
to what? to your true nature, your Buddha nature. This is why, in the highest
teaching of Buddhism, Dzogchen, you are told to "rest in the nature of
mind". You just quietly sit and let all thoughts and concepts dissolve. It
is like when the clouds dissolve or the mist evaporates, to reveal the clear
sky and the sun shining down. When everything dissolves like this, you begin to
experience your true nature, to "live". Then you know it, and at that
moment, you feel really good. It is unlike any other feeling of well being that
you might have experienced. This is a real and genuine goodness, in which you
feel a deep sense of peace, contentment and confidence about yourself.
It is good to
meditate when you feel inspired. Early mornings can bring that inspiration, as
the best moments of the mind are early in the day, when the mind is calmer and
fresher (the time traditionally recommended is before dawn). It is more
appropriate to sit when you are inspired, for not only is it easier then as you
are in a better frame of mind for meditation, but you will also be more
encouraged by the very practice that you do. This in turn will bring more
confidence in the practice, and later on you will be able to practice when you
are not inspired. There is no need to meditate for a long time: just remain
quietly until you are a little open and able to connect with your heart
essence. That is the main point.
After that, some
integration, or meditation in action. Once your mindfulness has been awakened
by your meditation, your mind is calm and your perception a little more
coherent. Then, whatever you do, you are present, right there. As in the famous
Zen master's saying: "When I eat, I eat; when I sleep, I sleep".
Whatever you do, you are fully present in the act. Even washing dishes, if it
is done one-pointedly, can be very energizing, freeing, cleansing. You are more
peaceful, so you are more "you". You assume the "Universal
You".
One of the
fundamental points of the spiritual journey is to persevere along the path.
Though one's meditation may be good one day and and not so good the next, like
changes in scenery, essentially it is not the experiences, good or bad which
count so much, but rather that when you persevere, the real practice rubs off
on you and comes through both good and bad. Good and bad are simply
apparations, just as there may be good or bad weather, yet the sky is always
unchanging. If you persevere and have that sky like attitude of spaciousness,
without being perturbed by emotions and experiences, you will develop stability
and the real profoundness of meditation will take effect. You will find that
gradually and almost unnoticed, your attitude begins to change. You do not hold
on to things as solidly as before, or grasp at them so strongly, and though
crisis will still happen, you can handle them a bit better with more humor and
ease. You will even be able to laugh at difficulties a little, since there is
more space between you and them, and you are freer of yourself. Things become
less solid, slightly ridiculous, and you become more lighthearted.