Monday 31 March 2014

'Meditation posture' Meditation Reflection - Mar 31 14

Link to meditation, guided by Ajahn Brahm

Came to the meditation quite relaxed, even after doing some early morning work which has importance and would at earlier times in my life before meditation stay on my mind and be distracting. Physically I had very minor aches that I was able to let go of mostly.

This meditation, focusing on allowing the body to be comfortable and letting go of the body in its comfortable position to then see the mind as a lotus petal, to which nothing sticks, allowed plenty of peace today, there were very few distracting thoughts.

The consideration of a mind to which nothing sticks during meditation was helpful, after having gone through some imaginations of what would stick to a lotus petal and letting them go. I found that if I was drifting in thoughts, those thoughts were so indistinct as to be almost unnoticeable and left behind quickly. There was some interruption to the quiet during my meditation which again was let go of quickly.


This meditation has limited and select guidance once begun, very spare and lots of room to leave the meditator to their own devices, and I found it to be one in which I felt peaceful and came out of more relaxed than when I started, not feeling quite as alert though as with the metta meditation of the previous days. I tended toward a dream like state rather than a mindful state I believe, so will see how it progresses this week.

Sunday 30 March 2014

Metta Meditation Reflection - Mar 30 14

Link to meditation, guided by Bhante Sujato


Came to the meditation simply, with few obstructions beyond my usual low grade anxious thoughts and slight physical pains. I was able to relax the body and begin the mantra with few thoughts taking me away from it significantly, there were thoughts and imaginations at the beginning that distracted but they receded, they came largely from dreams and a film I was watching last night can which a man remembers several different lives all lived at the same time.

I let the mantra be my focus and though I had no experience of a warm loving kindness the meditation, through the different stages of the mantra, felt deeper than meditations without a mantra.towards the end the mantra fell away and I sat in meditation just to be, to let it take me where it would for a little while, I thought of the lotus and that perhaps I had exposed a second layer of petals more fully than when taking the guidance of the lotus meditation itself.

I had some silence, some 'lights' though not nimmita I believe, maybe a hint that they were there. I then came out of the meditation by noticing my physicality, that I felt like moving, and that mentally I believed I was gaining some resilience, some way to accept and let go of my long carried anxieties that much more quickly.

Somewhere before or during my meditation was also the thought that my worries about money and finances were in fact worries about fear, fear of anxiety returning. I don't do things I wish to do partly because I live with a lover who convinces me not to pursue things that are not obviously financially beneficial, since I and we have limited means. This drives my life toward less fulfillment. I would like to pursue creativity for the belief it has fulfillment inherent in it. It is a poor excuse to not pursue happiness for the sake of love, and a false one.

Saturday 29 March 2014

Metta Meditation Reflection - Mar 29 14

Link to meditation, guided by Bhante Sujato
Came to the meditation quite relaxed, a bit less physical pain each day  over the last few days, so not a distraction beyond wheat stretching out, as I do before I settle into the meditation posture.

The meditation went well, I believe, though not clearly in the direction of metta. I repeated the mantra and was able to let go the body, such that it was not a distraction, hardly fidgeting at all.

Again I did not connect directly to a loving kindness within self, yet felt that it was a barrier I was presenting to the world, which did not let loving kindness in. With that feeling circulating, I thought of those that loved me or showed me love and how I deflected it, or did not soak up the warmth of it, so I revisited the love and in my meditation looked to let it warm me. This did not flood me with love or warmth but gave some sense that I could be more open to love, not skipping over that part of existence as if I understood it and did not value it.

How can I give love fully if I do not experience it fully?

When the mantra moved to wishing happiness for all beings, I felt a shift which is hard to describe, one that was almost a sense of conscious detachment beginning from my physical body, I imagined it may be the start of the experience transcendental meditators call astral meditation. But it did not develop once I had tuned my attention to it. I stopped the audio for the metta meditation and sat with no guidance, wanting to follow wherever my meditation was taking me without it being ended by Bhante Sujato's guidance.

I did not 'go' anywhere, I sat and felt that a defining unity of human existence is uncertainty, we do not know, we rarely accept; we mostly search, fear that this life is all, question our place or run from the questions.

Yet this is one umwelt, our experience of existence is but one and perhaps we are experiencing it as part of a stage of being. When it is is accepted and truly lived and felt, then we move on. Perhaps: if there is a human ideology that applied to existence, which is a very egotistical notion. But maybe we connect with the larger existence in these ways that humans feel common ties, we experience life as a journey, a motion through what we call time. A journey supposes a beginning and and end which we have, so we project that on what we don't know, as if what we don't know has a human correlation, or we dismiss it and project a larger stasis, as if existence is always, again only frameable in human terms. Well, what else can we do? Since we acknowledge we are limited we believe we may transcend our experience when our life's journey ends.


There was another personal consideration that cropped up in metta, that has cropped up several times since beginning meditation. That I have this internal good, felt with certainty at the most empty time in my life, an almost defining characteristic beneath all others, and that my life should be used to do good for others, others beyond my immediately loved. It may be that in attempting this I do not do good, that somehow I cause confusion and suffer cyclical rejection and frustration, but that argument only keeps my stuck. Most things I feel, or anyone feels, about doing good can be shot down, but only letting myself live that part of life will tell its story. I hope I do move from considering it, from my internal argument and fears, to doing it.

Friday 28 March 2014

Metta meditation Reflection - Mar 28 14

Link to meditation, guided by Bhante Sujato.

Came to the meditation calm and open, quite relaxed, some physical discomfort but nothing that interrupted the meditation. I was able to let go of the body and begin the mantra without being distracted by other thoughts, though again, as with other days, they did come, at a low and peripheral level, occasionally becoming my focus; thoughts of projects I wish to undertake, how I might do them and maintain financial stability; whether I should postpone them – thoughts based on wanting.

The guidance asks us to notice the feeling of loving kindness in our body that metta meditation fosters, and this I cannot yet feel. To bring up some warmth and loving kindness when wishing happiness of myself I bring to mind an image of my pet cat curled up in the sunlight, which also brings up my physical and mental connection to laying relaxed and happy in the sunlight, and I look to keep that feeling in mind whilst using the mantra "May I be happy." sometimes I feel it is also a question "May I be happy?" that is directed at the universe. In the next stage of metta - may my loved one be happy - I also imagine her lying happily on a beach in the sun to maintain that body memory of warmth during the meditation.

Come the end of the meditation I feel that it has gone quickly, that I feel more focussed mentally than at the beginning, that I feel more centered and peaceful, but I do not feel loving kindness, yet.

Thursday 27 March 2014

Metta Meditation Reflection - Mar 27 14

Link to meditation, guided by Bhante Sujato.
Came to the meditation mentally fairly relaxed, with some concerns of day to day life waiting to be resolved and provoking some anxiety at a low level, physically there is a fair amount of pain today likely from a muscle strain, so pain but no worry, a distraction, but one that is able to be put aside during meditation, as happened during the first few moments of relaxing the body and centering the mind.

I found myself able to focus on the mantra a little more clearly today; less thoughts takings from it, though they still did come and my concentration on each mantra diminished over time, until it was re-introduced by the guidance and directed to another area.

My uncertainty with metta was deepened nearer the end as I remembered an obstructive path of thinking whereby I feel the happiness of some beings is predicated on the suffering of others, such as wasps that lay eggs in other live animals, such as carnivores, and killers for other reasons.

I realize of course that this is an incomplete train of thought and budhist texts and teachings would have an answer, an acceptance for these lives and what their happiness entails that I do not, yet.


The meditation definitely allows my mind to feel less fatigued and at the end of the meditation I feel a fuller ability to concentrate and focus. I put the contradictions I uncover aside and turn my mind to the positives of the meditation and moving into the day more ready and more peaceful than without a meditation.

Wednesday 26 March 2014

Metta Meditation Reflection - Mar 26 14

Link to meditation, guided by Bhante Sujato.
Came to the meditation quite relaxed, small obstructions in the recesses of my mind as I have carried for so long: fears and worries, greed and disillusion.

The metta conflicting with letting go stays with me as before. I was able to relax the body and did not fidget or feel uncomfortable. My mind followed the mantras for a time then drifted to unconnected thoughts, those that are common to me, but at low levels of emotional response, i.e. the thoughts come but there is no escalation of feeling if they are troubling, I feel more able to let them just be thoughts and not to be inhabited unrealities, than during my life without meditation.

When asked to connect to and send loving kindness from within to without, I find no loving kindness within, no warmth or joy that doesn't feel manufactured just to perform a facsimile of what is possible.

I do know the love and kindness are there, yet I have not found a connection through metta, mostly I find my connection is with sharing time with those who I carry love for; a direct physical connection.

I don't include myself in that but do have a very strong connection to feeling I have good within me. I don't quite equate good with love, since my goodness is corrupted by wanting, whilst I want to overcome certain societal pressures to do with finances and recognition. The center of me is simply good, the layers and layers of barriers to that, partly osmotic, are protections imposed to 'fit' the world I was brought up in.

Tuesday 25 March 2014

Metta Meditation Reflection - Mar 25 14

Link to meditation, guided by Bhante Sujato
Came to the meditation quite relaxed, physically some pain but not a strong hinderance, during the meditation the pain lessened as I relaxed into my posture and adjusted it through the course of the meditation.

There is a conflict set up in me by metta that puzzles and prevents connecting with loving kindness as I start each metta meditation. Elsewhere in meditation practice we are guided to let go of all wanting and in metta we are guided to wish happiness for all things. This obvious wanting, for love, to give love is unresolved unless I find guidance to connect metta meditation to all othe practice.

My choice during metta meditation therefore is to let the contradiction go and let the meditation take me where it does. Today I find I felt relaxed and more focussed and "solid" by the end of it than at the start, I have no connection to the warmth of loving kindness inside of me that the guidance asks us to notice, but I feel some peace and that is what I feel I send out to all things during the stage of metta where we wish happiness for all beings.

Sunday 23 March 2014

'Lotus' Meditation Reflection - Mar 23 14

Link to meditation, guided by Ajahn Brahm
On coming to the meditation in a fairly calm, neutral manner, physically comfortable, the meditation progressed as far as relaxing the body and beginning to relax the mind in the present moment. Thoughts swam around, in my low-grade mindfulness they seem unbidden though I appreciate a stronger mindfulness reveals more.

Calm thoughts that come, moving the imagination and producing some creative language and exploration in thought are not the initially expected results of meditation, yet at my level are the most common shallow result. There is a deeper result which is most beneficial, which is a slow, not deep, but felt, inuring from common daily stresses. I have a little more peace, and more resilience in the sense of a quicker recovery to equilibrium from a stress event or series of thoughts, and even less tendency to fall into patterns of repetitive negative thought.

I go no deeper into the lotus, but I have a fuller appreciation of the outer petals. I sense that the deeper into the lotus we go, taken by kindness and mindfulness, the more secure we become as human beings.


"The only sane response to existence is apathy," was a thought that popped into my mind when I had drifted to remembering the new television version of Cosmos, when it attempted to show the scale of the universe, both external to our physical scale regarding the planet, solar system, universe and ever greater and the internal scale of cells, molecules, atoms and... I always wondered what all the space between the smallest level of particles is (not in the sense of it a scientific name - whatever the language used calls it at any moment). It is there that consciousness and what some human beings call God exists, I expect.

Thursday 20 March 2014

'Lotus' Meditation Reflection - Mar 20 14

Link to meditation, guided by Ajahn Brahm,

Came to the meditation reasonably relaxed, had not involved myself in many distractions prior to starting. I was able to let go of the body reasonably well and looked to relax my mental world.

I was soon lost in a variety of fairly negative thoughts that, though they didn’t descend into anxiety, were circular and largely unfounded in their stresses - thoughts of the future based on stresses of the past, worries over finances for our family that our life has not borne out and will hopefully settle and be able to be let go of in time.

The fit in this society which requires money to buy goods, for most of us, is an uncomfortable one for me, probably because of the cycle of dependency it requires, even a cycle of repression of creativity and joy, should you be earning money through ways you do not wish to continue. I have no desire to try and live without money, to be dependent on the kindness of donations as the monks who guide these meditations are. I have an admiration and respect for that life, but not a strong feeling that it is my path, one somehow missed and lost this time round. If anything I feel I may have trodden that path before in other lives (though I cannot even say I believe fully in reincarnation) perhaps with some fulfillment, perhaps with some fear.

Am I making the best of this life, am I understanding Karma, will I find contentment and see contentment in the hearts of those I love? Meditation has been beneficial most days, today I have reverted to a stressful mind, not being kind to myself or mindful of the perils I can avoid. Maybe later I will let go of the stresses, meditation seems to have helped them fall away quicker than in my life before it.

Wednesday 19 March 2014

'Peace' Meditation Reflection - Mar 19 14

Link to meditation, guided by Ajahn Brahm
Came to the meditation after doing various menial things this morning, again, not prioritizing it and allowing myself to be taken into the daily usual business and finance frustrations before starting. It's how I perceive my "monkey mind" – not allowing myself to let go and grasping for more.

During the meditation I was able to let go of the body well, I felt quite comfortable despite some physical pain the last 24 hours. Relaxing into my meditation posture let me turn to my mental state, which was not do relaxed, my wandering thoughts and imagination leading to some anxieties and catastrophising, though behind it I felt was some fear of loneliness or fear of judgement, though why I should have fears of those, I have not discovered yet.

The most common fear is of insufficient financial means to live the 'quality' of life with my loved one that allows for moments of peace and happiness. I understand the fallacy of this, that peace and happiness are internal and eroded by the taint of striving (for money, say). I still persist in maintaining that life though, my happiness coming just enough to keep me sane.

By the end of the meditation I felt a little more mentally relaxed, though these persistent thoughts were not let go of as successfully as in other meditations.


I don't negate the benefit of meditation because of that, I believe it to be providing a calming influence in my life and to giving me glimpses of a more peaceful life ahead.

Monday 17 March 2014

'Attitude' Meditation Reflection - Mar 17 14

Link to meditation guided by Ven Cittapalo

Came to the meditation after a disturbed sleep, with a day ahead for a loved one that marks a turning point for them, which will affect the family's emotional life for a while, so it is on my mind too, however I try and let it go, which I have to a large degree; letting things unfold with less tension now than I might have had at other times. It is easy to know that it is not about me, I am there as support and encouragement, hopefully to celebrate relief.

The meditation allowed me to let go of my body well, too, for some time, though again there was some discomfort later on and I moved position. This is a longer meditation and sometimes it feels it. I had times where I just settled on the breath, or on my heartbeat, and did not have distracting thoughts. When I did have thoughts they fairly quickly became peripheral and I centered back on 'now', more so from about half way through the meditation.

I feel alert at the end of the meditation and more connected and 'alive' than before it, once again.

Sunday 16 March 2014

'30 Minute Meditation' Reflection - Mar 16 14

Link to meditation, guided by Ajahn Brahm.
Almost didn't do today's meditation, being a victim of my monkey mind and being distracted by all manner of things leaving me little time before leaving for a later commitment. Just time though to fit in this 30 minute meditation (a little less, in truth), it's one I like.

During the meditation I was able to relax and let go of the body significantly, left to relax my mental world, I experienced what I presume is the usual lay experience of drifting thoughts. There were some moments of peace, where I began focusing on the breath, or rather my attention settled on the breath, but thoughts popped in again and distracted. The thoughts today had less worry behind them, some were amusing, some were forgotten within moments of having them, they weren't fully the centre of my attention at any time, becoming peripheral soon after occurring.


Coming to the end of the meditation I felt relaxed, more alert and less burdened than before it, the meditation does me good in that way, and so I carry on with it, most times wondering if there will be any breakthrough to deeper layers, but having in mind that to do that sets up a situation where one can't let go, for that wondering leads to wanting.

Best to just take the meditation as it comes and for whatever it is each time, there will always be another one as long as I keep up the practice. Like focusing on each event, or each day, instead of a life, when it brings less than what it offers in total.

Saturday 15 March 2014

'Attitude' Meditation Reflection - Mar 15 14

Link to meditation, guided by Ven Cittapalo
Came to the meditation quite relaxed, perhaps a little tired – several things on my mind to complete within a timeframe and certain worries over finances hovering in the background, but these were low level concerns, or more accurately, concerns kept at arms length. Physically I felt quite well and ready to meditate.

During the guided visualization, again I had no sense of seeing a reflection of myself. I could not even visualize the mirror, instead I let myself feel what I could about my attitude. Were I looking at a reflection, initially I thought I appeared a bit sad and deflated, theses emotions coming from relationship concern mainly, then I allowed that attitude to change and saw myself be more positive and grateful, to have a smile and consider how wonderful my life was.

Taking this attitude forward felt like a right thing to do in the meditation, yet I soon forgot and drifted into many different areas of indistinct and unimportant thought, this persisted for most of the meditation, interspersed with adjusting my posture two or three times as I felt pins and needles so moved my legs, straightening them for a while, crossing them again after and so on, till I settled a little.

I did come to a place of peace but only very near the end of the meditation, I realised I was comfortable and that I felt calm and positive, also that there were no thoughts running around. This was a good place to be, I noticed the breath and followed that for a while, then we were brought out of meditation.


On general reflection I think it seems to be taking me quite a while to shed the thoughts and uncertain emotions I have been experiencing for the last several days; that I have plenty of letting go to do to bring me to a peaceful place. Most of the emotion and thought are of course mixed up with "wanting" (more and better, or less and better; peace and contentment in any event, the impossible conundrum I have not shaken my desire for - peace and joy only being approached by letting the wanting and striving go). I could perhaps listen to some talks to redirect me as well as continuing my meditation practice.

Friday 14 March 2014

'Atitude' Meditation Reflection - Mar 14 14

Link to meditation, guided by Ven. Cittapalo.

Came to the meditation after some quite intense stresses early morning, which were largely resolved, physically I had some discomfort in my side, but otherwise OK.

This meditation called for the visualization of a reflection, to see and feel the attitude brought to the meditation. I was unable to see myself in the visualized mirror, I saw other things, none distinct or coherent, mainly dream like spaces and beings, and none felt as if they were a reflection of me; if anything, I felt that I was not in the mirror.

As the meditation progressed and my attention drifted, with thoughts coming in, though none were pressing, I came back to the visualization of the mirror, and never once saw myself. I would say it is because my concentration and ability to see the visualization are poor, not drawing any further conclusion from that.

I was comfortable and able to relax the body, and my thoughts did not trouble me, at the end of the meditation I feel quite relaxed, though can glean nothing distinct from this guidance as opposed to the process in other guided meditations, at least regarding the meditation practice.

It is of course very useful to imagine oneself and see and feel how you appear, if you consider that is perhaps what others see and feel. To soften ones attitude and to have a good outlook is more pleasing for others to be around, and brings more joy and peace into interaction and to oneself.

Thursday 13 March 2014

'Peace' Meditation Reflection - Mar 13 14

Link to meditation, guided by Ajahn Brahm.

Came to the meditation quite relaxed, a little tired and aware of a time constraint whereby I had to be out of the meditation within the hour. However, I was able to sit comfortably and let go of the body significantly, leaving my mind to relax into the space left. I had some drifting thoughts, mainly to do with balance (good/evil; noise/silence; male/female) and other thoughts to do with my body being made of the same stuff as the world I inhabit, so it can merge with it, be absorbed by it, yet my spirit is distinct, perhaps, free to float. I felt quite relaxed by the end of the meditation, and more alert than at the beginning. Off out into the world now.

Wednesday 12 March 2014

'Lotus' Meditation Reflection - Mar 12 14

Link to meditation, guided by Ajahn Brahm

Came to the meditation quite tired, after a very deep sleep, with frustrations playing out in my dreams that left a little mental hangover this morning, physically though I thought I was relaxed, during the early part of the meditation however, I was unable to get comfortable and was shifting my posture often.

After I had settled my thoughts swept around, the preoccupation being one of finding my place in this world as in previous days, whereby I was both fulfilling my creative talent and so provided with a financial means to live on, these have been disparate in my life so far. I also again had the underlying thought to let life lead me where it will, seen in yesterday's meditation reflection even, as long as I can be peaceful and engaged in society. These desires too seem somewhat exclusive of each other.

The bottom line is that they are "wanting," and it has come back with some force in recent days, pushing out internal peace, given importance after an argument with a loved one initially, but always just beneath the surface for me, all my life.

By the end of the meditation I had let go of the thoughts significantly, really only just at the very end was I beginning to feel more peaceful.

When asked how deep into the lotus I went. I thought, "one layer - letting go the body." When asked what's it like in there, I thought "bigger", when asked how I feel right now and what's it like close to the end of the meditation, I thought "fine" and "better than it was close to the start of the meditation."

Mentally and physically it stays true currently that I feel better after a meditation than before. Good.

Tuesday 11 March 2014

'Lotus' Meditation Reflection - Mar 11 14

Link to meditation, guided by Ajahn Brahm.
Came to the meditate quite relaxed physically, and mentally ok, though some concerns that persist over long term financial stability that have come up in recent days were in my mind. During the meditation I was able to let go of the body quite well, I did not think of it hardly at all, just adjusted my position minimally a couple of times. My mental world was busy but indistinct, thoughts flowing from one unconsidered subject to another, mindfulness aware of it but only occasionally able to let the thoughts finish and have some silence. I did not have the mindfulness to consider relaxing the muscles around my eyes today, which on other days has helped me still my thoughts, as if the two are linked somehow. 

When asked how far into the lotus I went, I thought, "nowhere" and when asked what it's like in there I thought, "I have no idea." a third question by Ajahn Brahm, "How do you feel right now?" found me feeling relaxed physically but mentally a bit busy, though for me a simple answer is "not bad," – a very British answer – I felt ok, quite alert, not overtly anxious, which I have been for a few mornings, and fairly open to my future being none of my concern beyond doing what I can now.

My past, which has been scrutinized negatively in recent days, well, that is a fairly open book, which I don't read often. I have not had the fulfillment in financial or critical acheivement that my upbringing demanded of me, nor have I had the confidence to impose myself into situations that others do - where I may feel I have ability and knowledge beyond those that garner praise, I have not had the focus, calm or adaptability - and particularly not having the ability to not care about what I was doing - that may have kept me in work I was regarded as being good at. Similarly I have not had the ability to care about recognition and reward enough to pursue it, nor have I had the mental toughness to maintain sense when under (particularly emotional) stress.


This life will bring what it may, I look to achieve what I can within the boundaries of my limitations and surroundings, usually working at the edges of those boundaries, so they may expand. I wish to bring good things to many people though I don't seem to cross the line between wishing it and being able to  do it. There are ideas I have now which may change that, but the biggest change will have to have come in me first, by having the ability to persist instead of to resist, and if I can flow like water around stresses and frustrations, then I also hope I can collect in a needed place and bring life to the soil I seep into, instead of stagnating over impermeable rock.

Monday 10 March 2014

'Peace' Meditation Reflection - Mar 10 14

Link to meditation, guided by Ajahn Brahm

Came to the meditation quite stressed and anxious, mostly mentally, but physically in pretty good shape. A few days of emotional turmoil has led to this and been added to by a lack of sleep and agitation in the home. During the mediation I was able to let go of the body reasonably fully and then found myself drifting through various thoughts to do with the events of the last few days and my emotional response to them, whilst also looking to let go of the negative feelings that have arisen and to not go over the upsetting words thrown in my direction beyond acknowledging them to be frustrations shared between me and loved ones. Thoughts went to the nature of the life I wish to lead, which doesn't tally with western society's relentless push to achieve more and acquire more.

I often felt these two credo's have been the root of so much anxiety and anger that I have pretty much divested myself of them as future goals, though I look to pursue achievement within the means I have to both improve my ability in whatever I am doing and to have items of utility for myself and my family which we value the quality of. This latter materialism is a hinderance I am aware of being insatiable, always able to consume as much as is given to it.

The desire for personal achievement is a puzzle I still am considering, that may always escape me. I have little idea why I want to 'achieve', beyond it being engrained in me as the purpose of my life, but I do still have an internal dissatisfaction that calls for "more," that is hard to let go of - many would say to embrace it, but that way unhappiness lies, I fear.

I know that I do "want," mainly good things (joy, contentment, peace) for myself and those I love and for humanity and life as a whole. That's a lot of wanting - wanting that can't be fulfilled by me, if ever wanting can be fulfilled? I am drawn to recall Ajahn Brahm saying that our will is our enemy. Why are we constructed like that though, to what end are we corrupted?

Saturday 8 March 2014

Meditation reflections March 8 & 9 2014

These were shorter outside meditations which weren't guided. I find great peace in allowing the sounds of the world fill me and push out my internal monologues or dialogues. For a half an hour each day I sat by the Hudson and heard the water lapping, the birds calling, people passing and traffic rushing by behind me, none of them drawing my attention as a distraction or drawing a focus one greater than the other, but being the meditation objects themselves. I am not always successful in this, the sounds that pull my attention are people talking loudly or music being played - those I don't tune out so easily. Otherwise I find this to be a very enjoyable way of 'meditating'.

Friday 7 March 2014

'Lotus' Meditation Reflection - Mar 07 14

Link to meditation, guided by Ajahn Brahm.
Came to the meditation fairly calm, physically and mentally. There was some aggravation this morning that was in my mind but it did not persist into the meditation. Some physical discomfort in my side did stay and was not able to be let go of or relaxed much, though I did not have it take my focus away greatly.

During the meditation there were a couple of periods of mental silence, of some peace, though my experience of or is rather like 'disappearing', so I sense the world around, the sounds mostly, though not labeling them or having them take me out of the peaceful state, as if the world goes on and I am not physically here, but am an invisible, insubstantiate observer. (yes, I know that is an invented word)

Outside of the moments of silence, I remembered a mention of guidance to smile, this led me to think I was not experiencing joy in meditation naturally, but would be imposing it if I actively chose to smile whilst meditating. Too much thinking there. Mostly my meditation feels impartial, I bring joy to it if I remember to, yet I mostly forget. I feel the connection to joy when I feel that disappearing begin and I have to smile at the wonderful world I perceive going on around me, so that has been my way into it, though it doesn't stay, joy in meditation is closer when I am sitting outside and warm in the sun or just feeling warmth in the air, rather than sitting in a room, and it seems to be about going outside of myself rather than going into myself. Perhaps they are the same thing.


At the end of the meditation, being asked by Ajahn Brahm, I felt maybe I had gone a petal or two into the lotus and it felt calmer and quieter there. I am pleased again to feel some mental sharpness after meditation, this is becoming more common, the tiredness of the other week is not present and my thoughts are less repetitive. I look to what I can do now to prepare for my future, more than just worrying about my future and getting stressed about what to do to avoid problems, i.e. my attention is more on 'now', more in the moment.

And still, I am easily riled, frustrated and unfulfilled. These emotions are close beneath the calmer surface, the peace of meditation like an oil slick on an ocean of effort; a hypocrisy. I'm hopeful that the experience of life enriched with meditation would help reverse that metaphor, one day.

Thursday 6 March 2014

'Lotus' Meditation Reflection - Mar 06 14

Link to meditation, guided by Ajahn Brahm
Came to the meditation quite relaxed, physically and mentally, had been looking at social media and news a bit before starting so mind was left with remnants of those thoughts into the start of the meditation.


Felt able to let go of the body fairly well, and though there was some discomfort in my side that distracted for the duration, I did not have it central in my attention. Thoughts that came after I had let the body go were short lived and not repetitive or anxiety provoking, again, they were not central to my attention.

However, I did not really maintain a center at all, the thousand petalled lotus, as meditation object, did not stay in my attention long past the last mention of it by Ajahn Brahm, resurfacing occasionally.

At the end when asked, I felt that I had not gone deep into the lotus, maybe only the first layer of petals - letting go the body. There were brief periods of time in the meditation where I felt silence, so that would be a little deeper in, they were not lasting enough to connect them with petals of the lotus opening though.

I am alert at the end, I feel quite relaxed and we'll see where the day goes.

Wednesday 5 March 2014

'Center Of Attention' Meditation Reflection - Mar 05 14

Link to meditation, guided by Ajahn Brahm

Came to the meditation quite relaxed, both physically and mentally. Was able to settle into a comfortable posture and let the body go, but quickly found I was not listening to the guidance and was pursuing thoughts all to do with wanting - career, material comfort, contentment - and ways of taking certain steps to advance projects; it was not the mentality of "this is good enough." In short, I was not meditating, just sitting thinking, albeit in a calm, relaxed manner.

At least I was mindful of this at times, so looked to let go of the thinking and put my attention on the present moment, yet I also had the notion in mind that 'in the present moment I am lost in thought'. I know that stretches the amount of time a moment is given as far as guidance in these meditations has discussed – that there is no time for thought in the moment of 'now'. Anyway, I found that my will, my desires were over-balancing my mindfulness and peacefulness, and so it was a shallow meditation, though again, as on other days this has happened recently, I feel quite alert, so it has taken me away from sleepiness, which was more present when I began the meditation.

Tuesday 4 March 2014

'Center Of Attention' Meditation Reflection - Mar 04 14

Link to meditation, guided by Ajahn Brahm.

Came to the meditation quite relaxed and physically well, managed to let go of the body to a good extent and settle the mind for a little while before falling into a pattern of repetitive thinking, about an unimportant satirical issue, and from that time on I did not have the mindfulness, joy in, or perception of a meditation object for long enough to leave those thoughts and come back to peace. Some of my thoughts amused me, and I leant a little on the instruction to let the mind go where it will, without putting importance into whatever is being thought, so letting it stop of its own accord, to justify letting them persist, but it would say that it was my often prevalent 'monkey mind' that took me away from relaxing meditation today. I was almost entirely in the future, working out what I might write, "kicking the ball," and not letting my thoughts come to rest, to leave them for later and use the meditation for more beneficial purposes. I do feel alert though, so perhaps there was a benefit in there that even my repetitive thinking couldn't dispel, since the subject was, at least, enjoyable as opposed to anxiety provoking?

Monday 3 March 2014

'Mindfulness' Meditation Reflection - Mar 03 14

Link to meditation, guided by Bikkhuni Hasapanna.
Came to the meditation quite relaxed, maybe a little melancholy, and physically well only with the most minor discomforts. I certainly found the introduction to be extremely limited, since it is only the last few minutes of what was an undoubtedly longer guidance on mindfulness in meditation and has almost nothing to consider as a meditation object, just the idea to make the breath a little less subtle should mindfulness not be able to focus on it. There is no guidance at all once the meditation starts, and we are not brought out of the meditation peacefully.

For all that, it is a useful step into self-guided meditation, and I did see that the teacher was propped up with a cushion behind her as well as her sitting on one, so I put a cushion behind my back, which I have not done for several months, and I was much more comfortable, which allowed my body to settle quicker and be let go of more completely.

What came after though was a blizzard of thought, stemming from wanting and ego, somewhat anxious and desperate (all regarding the wish for and opportunity to be employed in my creative enterprise and to blossom into that creativity with a way to earn the means to live). I managed to settle those thoughts for a while by calming my mind down, again, as yesterday, imagining it to be a pet curled up in front of a warm fire, relaxed and peaceful, or to be me lying on a beach, content. This helped for a while and then the thoughts came back again, though less insistent and less anxious. Once again I sought calm in the same manner and it came briefly, before more thoughts returned, and so the meditation went.

I came out of the meditation a little more relaxed than when I started, also more alert, so it was a good meditation in those senses.

Sunday 2 March 2014

'Mindfulness' Meditation Reflection - Mar 02 14

Link to meditation, guided by Bikkhuni Hasapanna.

Came to the meditation fairly relaxed, started by settling the body and moving on to settle the mind, allowing it to rest, visualising that restfulness as a relaxed pet curling up in front of a warm fire, then the meditation drifted in an out of gentle thoughts. I did not have a meditation object, as the post by DhammaLokaMeditation starts near the end of Bikkhuni Hasapanna's introduction. I felt perhaps that I could think of the lotus petals but that did not stay in my mind. Still, I sat and stayed relaxed throughout and allowed some peace to come.

Saturday 1 March 2014

'Lotus' Meditation Reflection - Mar 01 14

Link to meditation, guided by Ajahn Brahm.

Came to the meditation a little flat, mentally, a bit down due to stress over financial concerns (that I likely have no great cause to be concerned about) and the emotional well being of a loved one. Physically, I had a little bit of and unsettled stomach. Through the meditation I was able to relax my body and felt no discomfort there, I was still and mostly let the body go, some small tensions in my shoulder appeared late on but it was a very minor distraction. My mind wandered to both positive and negative places, neither one deeply, there was a mix of wanting and self pity, concerns that carried over from before the meditation, and the mindfulness to say to myself "Let this alone, these are not things that need enter my mind, they are not happening now, now is a peaceful and beautiful moment, just be here." I connected with 'now' for brief moments and felt relaxed by it.