| There are many methods of meditation: complicated
and simple, effective and useless, requiring much time and requiring
little. The following method is simple, effective and not too time
consuming. It is ideal for beginners. Many teachers, especially Buddhists,
limit themselves to it because it is sufficient for attaining enlightenment.
This method will provide the "optimum dose" of contemplative
activity without which the attainment of the Spiritual Goal is impossible.
It will also help in coping with stress, learning how to relax and
seeing reality as it is.
Without daily contemplative activity, i.e. meditation,
the spiritual path is IMPOSSIBLE! Don't wait for a more convenient
time to start doing meditation. It is not going to come. Do not
wait for tomorrow to begin your practice. Do not imagine that reading
about meditation can replace practicing meditation. Start doing
it today! (You must demand, with all due respect, and receive from
your teacher as soon as possible all the necessary instructions
regarding the spiritual path and meditation practice.)
Familiarize yourself with the following directions
on how to meditate, so that you will not be distracted during your
practice. Don't worry about how your meditation will go. Meditation
is a process the results of which will reveal themselves regardless
of how you are doing meditation, only regularity and patience are
necessary. Thinking about possible results, worrying about whether
you are meditating properly or not will only hinder the practice.
Through contemplative activity we are trying not to complicate our
condition with additional mental activity but to see it as it is.
The best way to begin meditation is simply to start, throwing all
preconceived ideas out the window. Do not judge yourself and not
worry about results. Shall we start?
Find a quiet, pleasant place and turn off the
telephone. Inform your friends that this is the time you devote
to yourself and that you do not wish to be disturbed. If you do
not have a quiet, convenient place, then adjust the best you can.
One can meditate under any conditions.
Sit comfortably on a chair, arm-chair, floor,
mat or a blanket, straighten your back, put your hands on your lap
one on top of the other (palms facing up), close your eyes. Deeply,
slowly breathe in and out 3-4 times to relax a bit.
Then examine your body from inside. How does
it look? How do you perceive the inside? Where are the organs? What
is their color? What is their condition healthy, sick, tired,
full of life? Slowly, step by step direct your attention to all
the major parts of the body, start down, finish up. After this,
with an imaginary broom, sweep out the tension and fatigue starting
at the bottom with your feet and finishing on top with your head
and then gradually, gradually let a feeling of pleasant relaxation
enter the body, as if a vast seascape has opened up before you.
Now let into this inner seascape all of the inner
and outer happenings allow all the sounds, thoughts, perceptions
and emotions to enter. DO NOT JUDGE OR ANALYZE THEM. Let these inner
and outer happenings have a place inside you but do not dwell on
them. Let them begin and end of their own accord without your participation.
Register the incessant chatter, fears and hopes
that continually surface in your consciousness. Note how you ceaselessly
scheme about the future, projects which like the Soviet five-year
plan will never come to be. Feel the eternal itch of worry that
something bad will happen. Listen to the quiet, aching guilt about
past mistakes best left behind.
Sit this way in contemplation NOT JUDGING AND
NOT LINGERING ON ANYTHING for about 15 minutes. After your meditation
practice it is beneficial to read an inspiring book, to be alone
or to go for a walk.
Acharya Abhidhyanananda Avadhuta
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