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Meditate For Your Wellbeing
Why should you Meditate For Your Wellbeing? Do you want to sleep better, fight stress, feel happier, and more "at peace"? All this can be easily achieved by adopting the practice of regular meditation. I love to meditate, it honestly makes me feel happier and gives me more clarity. The best part is that anyone can meditate and starting is easy! We have Goodlife Zen to tell us how to introduce this our life!
How Meditation Can Benefit Your Life
1. Posture
Whether you sit on a chair or cross-legged on the floor, make sure that your spine is upright with head up. If you are slumped your mind will drift. Mind and body are intertwined. If your body is well-balanced, your mind will also be in balance. To straighten up, imagine that your head is touching the sky.
2. Eyes
Try and keep you eyes open. Open eyes allow you to be more present. Just lower your eyes and let your gaze be soft. If you close your eyes you will be more likely to drift away on thoughts and stories. However, itās important to do what is comfortable for you. Some people find closing their eyes much more effective. Itās good to experiment and see what feels best for you.
2. Focus
In ordinary consciousness we are hardly ever present. For example, sometimes we drive the car on autopilot while being preoccupied with thoughts. Suddenly we arrive at our destination and donāt remember anything about the drive!
So, meditation is a wonderful way of waking up to our life. Otherwise we miss most of our experiences because we are somewhere else in our mind! Letās take a look at what focus is. In ordinary life, we tend to equate focus with concentration. Thatās like using the mind like a concentrated beam of light. But in meditation, that kind of mind isnāt helpful. Itās too sharp and edgy. To focus in meditation means to pay soft attention to whatever you place in the centre of awareness. I suggest using the breath as a focus. Itās like a natural door that connects āinsideā and āoutsideā. Zen Master Toni Packer says:
Attention comes from nowhere. It has no cause. It belongs to no one
3. The breath
Paying attention to the breath is a great way to anchor yourself in the present moment.Notice your breath streaming in and out. Thereās no need to regulate the breath ā just let it be natural.
4. Counting you breath
If you are having difficulties settling, you can try counting the breath ā which is an ancient meditation practice. On your outbreath, silently count āoneā, then ātwoā, and up to āfourā. Then return to āoneā. Whenever you notice your thoughts have strayed far away or you find yourself counting āthirty-threeā, simply return to āoneā. In this way, āoneā is like coming home to the present moment. Itās good to return without a backward glance.
5. Thoughts
When you notice thoughts, gently let them go by returning yous focus to the breath. Donāt try to stop thoughts; this will just make you feel agitated. Imagine that they are unwelcome visitors at your door: acknowledge their presence and politely ask them to leave. Then shine the soft light of your attention on your breath.
6. Emotions
Itās difficult to settle into meditation if you are struggling with strong emotions. This is because some emotions tend to breed stories in the mind. Especially anger, shame and fear create stories that repeat over and over in the mind. Anger and shame make us keep looking at past events of the past. Fear looks at the future with stories that start with, āWhat ifā¦ā
The way to deal with strong emotions in meditation is to focus on the body feelings that accompany the emotion. For example, this could be the tight band of fear around the chest or the hot roiling of anger in the belly. Let go of the stories and refocus on your body. In this way you are honouring your emotions but not becoming entangled in stories.
7. Silence
Silence is healing. I know that there are is a lot of āmeditation musicā around, but nothing beats simple silence. Otherwise the music or sounds on the tape just drown out the chatter in your mind. When we sit in silence we actually get to experience what our mind is doing. There is steadiness and calmness that comes from sitting in silence. In time outer and inner silence meet and you come to rest in the moment.
8. Length
Start with 10 minutes and only sit longer if you feel the length is too short. Donāt force yourself to meditate longer if you are not ready to do that. In time you might like to extend your meditation to 25 minutes. Thatās a length that allows you to settle your mind without causing too much stress on your body. Most importantly, shrug off any āshouldsā. Some people enjoy sitting for an hour at a time. Others find that they canāt sit longer than 10 minutes. Do what feels right for you!
9. Place
Itās lovely to create a special place to sit. You can even make a shrine or an altar that you can face when you sit in meditation. You might like to place a candle on your altar and objects that have meaning to you. Itās lovely to find objects for your altar as you walk. Maybe you find stones, or seashells, or flowers that speak to you. Meditate For Your Wellbeing
10. Enjoyment
Most of all, itās important to enjoy meditation. You might like to try sitting with a hint of a smile. Be kind to yourself. Start sitting just a little each day.
I hope that you can take these steps and starting your meditation journey! Clear you mind!
Share your comments & questions!