Showing posts with label Mind. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mind. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

The Importance of Meditation


Most people when they pray talk to God rather than with Him. They don’t take the time to listen, in deep inner silence, for His answer. Prayer, however, to be most deeply meaningful, needs to be a two-way communication, a giving and receiving — like conversation. And while it would be absurd to think in terms of “fascinating” God with our part of the conversation, there are proven ways of making our prayers more effective. Listening is one of them.

How many people ever think of prayer in this way? Usually, they think of it as begging for special favors, as though prayer were a petition submitted before the aweful majesty of an imperial throne. Many, no doubt, question whether the Lord will even single them out for special attention from among the multitudes appealing to Him daily. Perhaps they fear they might be judged presumptuous if they tried to interest Him beyond the actual subject of their petition. Whatever the case, most people talk a lot, like inadequate conversationalists, but seldom think of listening in return.

The difference between the one-way street of normal prayer and actually conversing with God is simply the degree of involvement — on both sides. Of course, there can be no question of trying to “fascinate” Him with our conversation. The Lord has all creation to engage His attention, besides the perfection of love and bliss in which He eternally dwells. One petty life in the great scheme of things cannot particularize His interest to the point of making Him fascinated with it! When we approach Him, however, with deep love, dedication, and trust, we appeal to that cosmic, but at the same time deeply personal, love which He feels for every one of his human children.

Prayer must come from the heart. That is what I mean by conversation. As there is a world of difference between talking at someone and talking with him, so there is a universe of difference between petitioning God and including Him in the needs we feel.

We need to involve Him in our lives, in our love for Him. How can we hope to do that, if we merely pray to him? That’s like talking at somebody.

Leaving aside the question of fascination, conversationally, how are we most likely to involve anyone in anything that interests us? It isn’t much different from listening for answers to a question. We involve them best when we include their reality in our own. To awaken concern in them for our needs, we must show an interest in their needs. To get them to participate in our lives, we must participate in their lives. To get them to show love for us, we must love them, first.

All this involvement on our part is, in its own way, a kind of listening. We need, in the same way, to listen to God. The kind of prayer that most often wins a response is one in which the person praying converses with God: calls to Him, while at the same time listening for His silent response in the soul.

And that is, essentially, what is meant by the practice of meditation. Meditation is the act of listening for, and hopefully, in time, listening to, God’s whispered response in the soul.

Why not try that, next time you pray to God? Instead of merely offering up a petition for His consideration, try involving Him in your needs.

Meditation is more than a practice conducted at specific times of the day. It is a habit of mind, a way of life. Try sharing your thoughts and feelings with God all day long. Listen for His guidance, His approval — yes, even His silent laughter within! When you share your life with Him, your meditations also will be much deeper.

When people exclude the practice of meditation from daily prayer, it usually means they aren’t really convinced there is anyone “up there,” listening to them. All too easily, their prayers become a process of simply talking to themselves.

Well, one may ask, does God really listen anyway? You'll never know, if you don’t give Him a chance to reply! Just as in any conversation, the degree of listening, and the response it awakens, is in direct proportion to the degree of one’s own involvement in what he is saying. Why else is it that the prayers of saints have been, often, so much more effective than those of worldly people? God is no respecter of persons. His response is according to the depth of sincerity in the person praying.

In conversation, people tend to think of listening as something one does after he has said his piece. Personally, however, I’ve found that there is much better communication if one “listens” — that is to say, is sensitive to the other person’s reactions — even during the act of speaking to him. When lecturing, also, even though I don’t expect people to start up a conversation with me from the audience, I’ve found it helps, while lecturing, to “tune into” their needs, to respond to their unspoken reactions, to feel as though I were speaking to each one of them individually.

On the subject of lecturing, I’ve found it helps also to “listen” even before I begin speaking. By that I mean that I meditate and try to tune into what the people in this particular audience need to hear from me.

In the same way, Paramhansa Yogananda (author of Autobiography of a Yogi), who brought teachings and techniques from India to the West, used to say that prayer is most effective when it is offered after some contact with God has been achieved in deep meditation.

Western society generally identifies meditation with the thinking process. We are told to meditate “on” a particular subject. Vaguely, we suppose this means to think in circles around it, hoping for a deeper understanding of it. Only comparatively recently has the teaching come to the West that silence itself is the wellspring from which true understanding arises. In other words, true, and especially spiritual, understanding is not the product of thinking one’s way to it, but of direct inner perception. As Yogananda wrote in his autobiography, “A truth cannot be created, but only perceived.”

Meditation, in this deeper sense, begins with the practice of stilling one’s thoughts and emotions.

Yogananda told the story of a man who was told, as a means of developing spiritual power, to be very careful not to think of monkeys. Of course, the next time he sat to meditate, the first thing he thought about was monkeys! The more he tried not to think of them, the more he probed his memory for every variety of monkey he’d ever read or heard about. Monkeys gradually became an obsession. At last, he returned to his teacher and cried, “Take back this teaching of yours! All it has done is give me monkey-consciousness, not God-consciousness!”

At this, the teacher laughed genially and explained, “I only wanted to help you realize how difficult it is to develop spiritual powers, without first learning to control your own mind.” He then went on to explain to his student the positive aspects of meditation.

So then, the first lesson is: Don’t live in “monkey consciousness”! Instead of trying not to let thoughts and emotions enter your mind, dwell on positive opposite practices that will exert a calming influence on your mind.

The breath is one such influence, when it is used rightly. Not only does the breath reflect one’s mental states: It also greatly affects them.

Take the breath as a reflection of thought and feeling. When a person is agitated, his breathing automatically speeds up. When he falls asleep, his breathing rhythm changes: two counts of exhalation, to one of inhalation. When he is deeply concentrated, he tends to hold his breath. When he is calm, his breathing becomes calm also.

The reverse also is true. By breathing agitatedly, one tends to create an agitated mental or emotional state. A photographer, when taking a photo demanding sensitivity and concentration, learns to hold his breath before clicking the camera shutter.

By calm, deep breathing, similarly, the mind and emotions grow calm also, releasing us from any turmoil that may have been seething within us. This is why the advice is so often given to people who are angry or upset, “First, take a deep breath, and count to ten.”

A good practice when sitting to meditate is to do a few deep breathing exercise. The yoga teachings offer a number of such exercises, some of which I explain in my yoga correspondence course, The Ananda Course in Self-Realization. Less sophisticated than many of these, but quite effective, is this:
Sit upright, and breathe deeply through the nostrils counting 6 – 12. Hold the breath 6 – 12. Then exhale, again to a count of 6 – 12. In this particular exercise, don’t hold the breath out, but begin again immediately with another inhalation. Repeat this exercise six to twelve times.

Your posture during meditation is important. We’ve all seen photographs in advertisements of people “meditating” according to the Western notion of relaxation: a person reclining comfortably on a “Lazy Boy” chair, his feet up, his head tilted back on the headrest, his entire posture suggestive of a mood of abandonment. The yogis of India would smile at this passive attempt at relaxation. The fact is, while relaxation is essential to deep meditation, passivity is one of the pitfalls to true relaxation.

There are two directions the mind can take once it relaxes its grip on conscious thought processes. One is to sink toward subconsciousness. This is the direction taken when one’s relaxation is passive. The other direction is to rise toward superconsciousness. Deep meditation is possible only in the intensely positive state of superconsciousness, or soul-awareness.

To attain this state of consciousness, it is important to sit upright with a straight spine. Traditionally, one does so sitting on the floor with the legs crossed, preferably in one of the yoga positions such as the half or full lotus pose, or Siddhasana (the “perfect pose”), but Yogananda said that it is quite all right to sit on a straight-backed chair, with the feet flat on the floor.

Sit away from the back of the chair. Place your hands palms upward at the junction of the thighs and abdomen. Hold the shoulders back to help keep the spine straight. Hold the chin parallel to the ground.

Before the deep breathing exercise, relax the body. First, inhale; tense the whole body till it vibrates; then throw the breath out, and with it all tension. Repeat this process two or three times.

After the deep breathing, concentrate on relaxing more and more deeply — not physically only, but mentally and emotionally. Feel space in the body.

Look upward, concentrating your attention at the central point between the two eyebrows, the seat of spiritual vision. Offer up all thoughts and feelings in deep concentration at this point. Call mentally to God, “Reveal Thyself! Reveal Thyself!”

Gradually, you will feel His peace stealing over you, like a weightless waterfall.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Simple Meditation Technique For Beginners

Meditation has been practiced for centuries by all different kinds of people and cultures. It can either be used as a means of relaxation or to prepare the mind for a challenge. It is also well known for its ability to promote a feeling of well being. Because of this there are people who would like to learn how to meditate. Here then is a few methods to start on your road of meditation.

The first thing you will want to do is find somewhere that is quiet so that you don't have any distractions. This is very important in order to meditate you need peace and quiet. You may find a nice place in your garden or in your house.

Set down, or adopt a comfortable posture. Make a concerted effort that you will relax. Some find it beneficial to lie down when they meditate but others find that they sleep if they try this. So be open to what will work best for you. Pay special attention to your limbs, trunk and head as you start to meditate. You will become more stress free as you do this.

Slow down your breathing as much as possible as you do this. Do not hold your breathe as you do this. Become aware of how long each breath takes by counting each one up to or seven. Become aware of how much it is relaxing and notice with each breath you relax more and more.

Once you've became relaxed enough to need to try to sharpen your focus. You may want to tune into something that you can hear, or maybe just think about the space you are in. But don't try to focus on anything that is distracting or will take your mind off of what you are doing too much. Or your meditation won't work properly.

Now that you have found the meditation practice you will most likely want to try it out to see what you have learned. Do not be discouraged if you are not successful in your first attempts. Be aware that it might take awhile to feel real relaxation. But, the more you practice the more you will find it beneficial for you. Then allow yourself to drift off and now that you know the beginners method try it for yourself.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Yoga - Best For Mind, Body, Spirit Wellness

We have learned, in the past century, that our mental, physical and emotional or spiritual selves are related parts of our whole self. That if one component, the mental for example, is negatively affected, this will redound to the disadvantage of the other component selves as well.

Nobody ever welcomes the possibility of any health concerns. The quandary is so real - being or regaining health and keeping fit? Most everyone began pondering over possible, realistic and effective ways to manage it. There must be efficient and effective ways of stress management and relief.

Yoga could be the thing to meet these concerns.

The concept of Yoga is directed toward these three basic concerns of body movements to methods of breathing including meditation. Originating from the East, as among its ancient traditions, Yoga is now accepted and done in local, and global communities. Its followers started with religious organizations and now include business and professional entities and the ordinary civilian. There is now global acceptance of how stress diminishes work effectiveness and disrupts the harmony in a home and how yoga helps in stress management or relief.

Yoga looks at things as a whole. Yoga focuses on oneness - bringing together the body, mind and spirit. This theory delivers you from stress, grants you physical health, mental awareness and spiritual transformation.

Yoga teaches you how to meditate effectively, you are taught proper breathing, visualization, body stretching movements. The poses in yoga extend your spine while you're learning to regulate and slow down your breathing. Your body becomes equally rested and energized.

As you go on with yoga over time, you later get resistance to stress. The complete program of breathing methods, body stretches, fitness plans, meditation and directed visualization take out the stress you're confronting now.

Not only stress management and relief, Yoga likewise brings down blood pressure and adjusts heart rate, it diminishes anxiety levels and muscle constriction and raises energy levels and limbering of the body.

Yoga moves, in comparison to the usual exercise routines, are slow and gentle, which make Yoga applicable even to those who are physically hampered by illness.Plus, the meditation and positions of Yoga develop your spiritual awareness and mental consciousness.

Nothing good comes just falling into our laps. You must allot a regular time for you before you can acquire these gains leading towards the fitness of your entire system. Which in time will soon make you realize that getting into yoga was the best decision you ever made in your life.