Showing posts with label meditation teacher. Show all posts
Showing posts with label meditation teacher. Show all posts

Friday, March 3, 2023

Introductory Notes Related to Meditation Practice

     Ways and Kinds of Meditation:               


                  One may know that there are many ways to meditate and many kinds of meditation, but only a few sorts are regularly practiced. There are reasons for that. Most of us appreciate simplicity and effectiveness, so we choose a practice which we find effective and simple. Over time we may we may come to be grateful for the ways and varieties of meditation from which we may choose.

                Body position or movement can represent ways and varieties and may include variations of walking, sitting, and lying down. There are also a number of ways of guided meditation. There are solo meditations and group meditations. There are those that include yoga postures. Meditation is done for a variety of purposes which call for a variety of practices.

                A teacher can help one to sort out these ways, means, purposes and attitudes of meditation. I have been a student of meditation and have some experience and knowledge of the practice. I have learned that for me it is best to keep it simple, to aim for good effect, and to treat it as a sort of exploration.

Preparing to Meditate:                

For one contemplating practice, some preparation is helpful. Reading this little essay may count for som preparation as can looking over other posts on this blog. Finding a good instructor, teacher, guru, can be useful preparation.

                There are many ways to prepare. Some have to do with personal preferences. For example, I feel better when I have some sort of timer  which I can set to tell me when the time I have alloted for a session has been completed.  

                Just sitting in awareness or mindfulness is good preparation. I is also meditating! Still, such sitting calls for having an appropriate place to sit. That is, one has preparation to complete. 

                Starting to meditate may be the most important act to begin meditating! Just quietly is a real start when you know you are doing so.

                More good preparation can be to get a well qualified meditation coach. A qualified coach is one who keeps up to date with what you are doing and how you are doing, he, or she, is one who knows the state of your practice today.

                You are the one most responsible for your meditation. You are the only one who can do your meditation. You are well positioned to know what you are doing and how you are doing it. The thing is to do it and to find out more about what it is by way of your observation. As a meditator you are a learner. You may come to note that much learning includes practice and observation. 

Beginning to Practice:                

For me, practice often begins with me seated in a good chair and closing my eyes. Neither the sitting nor the eyeclosing is necessary, but they both have helped me to a good sort of meditation, and so are often part of my meditation. 

                A timer isn't necessary for good meditation either, butI have found it helpful. One thing it does is to tell me when the time I have chosen to meditate is concluded. I sometimes have divided a meditation in to parts and the timer can remind me of when to begin the next part. For more of what I chosen to do in meditation, you can search the posts of this blog. You may discover something unexpected.

                Sitting in a meditation group has been good for me, but I have often been pleased to meditate alone. I like a calm quiet place and  a comfortable chair, but not a chair so comfortable that sleep would tempt me. Actually sleep does not tempt me, but my thoughts of sleep certainly can. However, we can use our power over our thoughts, can't we? For me, meditating includes an awake, alive, alert, observing process. And it is so even when I stretch out on the grass or floor to meditate.

                It seems important to add that my meditation is often the practice of maintaining focus. It is way to develop my skill of maintaining attention on that which I have chosen to attend to. It reminds me of the hunter who has decided to come home with fresh venison. He chooses a position from which he expects to see a deer. He waits expectantly. He avoids thoughts or sights that so divert his attention so as to cause him to miss the coming of the deer.

                I expect that you are now clear that determining a time and place to meditate is useful preparation for meditation. As further preparation for meditating I, upon arriving at the time and place to meditate, would check to see that my timer and chair were ready. I would arrange my mind to make ready to observe and pay attention to my doings and intentions. Not difficult perhaps, but important. You have probably heard that concentration and focus are often important parts of meditation.

                Without my timer I have  found myself meditating far beyond my allotted time. Others learn to avoid that problem without a timer, but I have not. at another time I have opened my eyes ready to go on to other doings only to find that only ten minutes of my allotted time of 45 minutes had passed! 

                It seems to soon to cover much more in any detail. I have covered more in posts available here and will add more in future posts. And, you can use the the "comments" app just below to ask questions as well as to make comments. I try to respond to "comments" promptly in a useful way.

                I do have a bit more to write ab0ut before closing this post.


Details of Practice:

                For me, meditation practice ought to be about attention and attentiveness and most often it is just that. In each practice, I tend to focus on a limited, defined topic. The hunter had his deer. I have often chosen a word or short phrase on which to focus. The hunter perhaps chose a vision. I attend to all that comes up and may ask myself what it has to do with my chosen focus. Then I let it pass and resume my intended focus.

                I may decide that I shall focus on my breath and that process I shall count them. To begin I might count rounds of four. Counting entails words or symbols and that is fair. An inhalation and an exhalation may represent one complete breath and four such breaths complete round. I may think the word "in" as in inhale and "out" as I exhale. An 'in' and an "out" would count as on breath in my rounds of 4 breaths. As I continue the practice I may add attending to the difference of feeling air passing in through my nostrils to the air passing out.

Meditate Now:                

                  You can meditate right now if you wish. Sit with good posture. Take a few full breaths. Now as you continue to be aware of your breath try repeating "good posture, no pain" slowly and calmly. Breath normally or slightly deeper than usual. Intend to breathe smoothly, regularly, rhythmically. When you find yourself not repeating your phrases remind yourself to do so. When you find that you are not breathing as intended, remind yourself to return to doing so. Continue until you have completed the time you have allotted to the session. That's fairly big time meditation. You may now know enough to to develop your practice well for the next many months.

                When the above seems too complicated for comfort, set your timer for ten minutes and sit quietly for that time. That's good meditation. Just sit quietly without using the timer. That's meditation too.

                Congratulations! You have learned a lot about meditation. You may have moved from esoteric to exoteric. You may have meditated and also have learned a bit about yourself.

               Thank you for the visit. 

               Come back to explore and find out more. 



                                                                                                RCS