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The practice of mindfulness/awareness meditation is common to all
Buddhist traditions. Beyond that, it is common to, inherent in,
all human beings.
In meditation we are continuously discovering who and what we
are. That could be quite frightening or quite boring, but after
a while, all that slips away. We get into some kind of natural
rhythm and begin to discover our basic mind and heart.
Often we think about meditation as some kind of unusual, holy
spiritual activity. As we practice, that is one of the basic beliefs
we try to overcome. The point is that meditation is completely
normal; it is the mindful quality present in everything we do.
That is a straightforward principle but we are continuously distracted
from coming to our natural state, our natural being. Throughout
our day everything pulls us away from natural mindfulness, from
being on the spot. Our natural tendency to rush means that we're
rushing past opportunities. We're either too scared or too embarrassed
or too proud or just too crazy, to be who we are.
That is what we call the journey or the path: continuously trying
to recognize that we can actually relax and be who we are. So
practicing meditation begins by simplifying everything. We sit
on the cushion, follow our breath and watch our thoughts. We simplify
our whole situation.
Mindfulness/awareness meditation, sitting meditation, is the
foundation of this particular spiritual journey. Unless we are
able to deal with our mind and body in a very simple way, it is
impossible to think about doing high-level practices. How the
Buddha himself, having done all kinds of practices, became the
Buddha was simply to sit. He sat under a tree and he did not move.
He practiced exactly as we are practicing.
What we're doing is taming our mind. We're trying to overcome
all sorts of anxieties and agitation, all sorts of habitual thought
patterns, so we are able to sit with ourselves. Life is difficult,
we may have tremendous responsibilities, but the odd thing, the
twisted logic, is that the way we relate to the basic flow of
our life is to sit com-pletely still. It might seem more logical
to speed up but here we are reducing everything to a very basic
level.
How we tame the mind is by using the technique of mindfulness.
Quite simply, mindfulness is complete attention to detail. We
are completely absorbed in the fabric of life, the fabric of the
moment. We realize that our life is made of these moments and
that we cannot deal with more than one moment at a time. Even
though we have memories of the past and ideas about the future,
it is the present situation that we are experiencing.
Thus we are able to experience our life fully. We might feel
that thinking about the past or the future makes our life richer,
but by not paying attention to the immediate situation, we are
actually missing our life. There's nothing we can do about the
past, we can only go over it again and again, and the future is
completely unknown.
So the practice of mindfulness is the practice of being alive.
When we talk about the techniques of meditation, we're talking
about the techniques of life. We're not talking about something
that is separate from us. When we're talking about being mindful
and living in a mindful way, we're talking about the practice
of spontaneity.
It's important to understand that we're not talking about trying
to get into some kind of higher level or higher state of mind.
We are not saying that our immediate situation is unworthy. What
we're saying is that the present situation is completely available
and unbiased, and that we can see it that way through the practice
of mindfulness.
SITTING
MEDITATION PRACTICE
At this point we can go through the actual form of the practice.
First, it is important how we relate with the room and the cushion
where we will practice. One would relate with where one is sitting
as the centre of the world, the centre of the universe. It is
where we are proclaiming our sanity, and when we sit down the
cushion should be like a throne.
When we sit, we sit with some kind of pride and dignity. Our
legs are crossed, shoulders relaxed. We have a sense of what is
above, a sense that something is pulling us up at the same time
that we have a sense of the ground. The arms should rest comfortably
on the thighs. Those who cannot sit down on a cushion can sit
in a chair. The main point is to be somewhat comfortable.
The chin is tucked slightly in, the gaze is softly focusing downward
about four to six feet in front, and the mouth should be open
a little. The basic feeling is one of comfort, dignity and confidence.
If you feel you need to move you should just move, just change
your posture a little bit. So that is how we relate with the body.
And then the next part-actually the simple part-is relating with
the mind. The basic technique is that we begin to notice our breath,
that we could have a sense of our breath. The breath is what we're
using as the basis of our mindfulness technique; it brings us
back to the moment, back to the present situation. The breath
is something that is constant-otherwise it's too late.
We put the emphasis on the out-breath. We don't accentuate or
alter the breath at all, just notice it. So we notice our breath
going out, and when we breathe in, there is just a momentary gap,
a space. There are all kinds of meditation techniques and this
is actually a more advanced one. We're learning how to focus on
our breath while at the same time giving some kind of space to
the technique.
Then we realize that, even though what we're doing is quite simple,
we have a tremendous number of ideas, thoughts and concepts-about
life and about the practice itself. And the way we deal with all
these thoughts is simply by labeling them. We just note to ourselves
that we're thinking, and return to following the breath.
So if we wonder what we're going to do for the rest of our life,
we simply label it thinking. If we wonder what we're going to
have for lunch, simply label it thinking. Anything that comes
up, we gently acknowledge it and let it go.
There are no exceptions to this technique: there are no good
thoughts and no bad thoughts. If you're thinking how wonderful
meditation is, then that is still thinking. How great the Buddha
was, that's still thinking. If you feel like killing the person
next to you, just label it thinking. No matter what extreme you
go to, it's just thinking, and come back to the breath.
In the face of all these thoughts, it is difficult to be in the
moment and not be swayed. Our life has created a barrage of different
storms, elements and emotions that are trying to unseat us, trying
to destabilize us. All sorts of things come up, but they are labeled
thoughts and we are not drawn away. That is known as holding our
seat, just dealing with ourselves.
POSTMEDITATION
PRACTICE
The idea of holding our seat continues when we leave the meditation
room and go about our lives. We maintain our dignity and humour
and the same lightness of touch we use dealing with our thoughts.
Holding our seat doesn't mean we are stiff and trying to become
like rocks; the whole idea is learning how to be flexible. The
way that we deal with ourselves and our thoughts is the same way
that we deal with the world.
When we begin to meditate, the first thing we realize is how
wild things are-how wild our mind is, how wild our life is. But
once we begin to have the quality of being tamed, when we can
sit with ourselves, we realize there's a vast wealth of possibility
that lies in front of us. Meditation is looking at our own backyard,
you could say, looking at what we really have and discovering
the richness that already exists. Discovering that richness is
a moment-to-moment process, and as we continue to practice our
awareness becomes sharper and sharper.
This mindfulness actually envelopes our whole life. It is the
best way to appreciate our world, to appreciate the sacredness
of everything. We add mindfulness and all of a sudden, the whole
situation becomes alive. This practice soaks into everything that
we do; there's nothing left out. Mindfulness pervades sound and
space. It is a complete experience.
The following transcript is a condensed compilation of talks
given on the first day of a two-day seminar entitled Fearless
in Meditation, which took place at the Rocky Mountain Shambhala
Centre on March 26 and 27, 1994. Click to learn more about
the Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche and
meditation.
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