Meditation is a topic that seems to cause much unnecessary grief
and consternation. Many hold to the false notion that meditation is
"quieting" the mind. Well, the mind will not be quieted! Our mind is always in motion, right now your mind is regulating all of the various systems
and organs in your body, making thousands of silent decisions about
hormone levels, blood pressure, heart beat, breathing, digestion etc.
All of this taking place without any conscious thought on our part.
Therefore, to be clear, the mind is never quiet, meditation reorders our conscious thoughts, allows our mind to naturally find
true focus and in focus lies peace.
When a new student first begins meditating, typically they have a
picture in their minds eye based of some actor’s portrayal. Even
documentaries usually get it wrong since those doing the reporting
usually have little or no personal experience with meditation. So,
let us begin at a simpler level. First, lay aside your conceptions of
what meditation is or is not. Meditation is a tool and there is more
than one tool in the tool chest.
Reflective Meditation:
Find a quiet place where you will not be disturbed for 15 minutes or
so. Avoid if at all possible telling anyone what you are about. Pick
any spiritual tome that appeals to you and read a few lines, never more
than two paragraphs. Then take three cleansing breaths: breathe in
gently and deeply
through the nose and then gently exhale through the mouth. Now, with
eyes closed, reflect in your minds eye on what you just read. Consider
each word along with the over all import of the passage. Do this for 15
minutes or so. When done perform another cleansing breath, thank
Source (God) for time spent and go about your day. If in the course of
the meditation your mind begins to wander, gently bring the focus back
to what was read. If it wanders again, take a cleansing breath, thank
Source
(God) for time spent and go about your day. Note: Do not struggle or
condemn yourself in any way if you are unable to go 15 minutes in the
beginning. No marathon runner started out running marathons. Additionally do not set a
timer or wear a watch or have a clock in your field of vision to peak at. In time,
this will not matter but when first starting out it is a distraction.
Your body has a wonderful natural clock; allow it to do its job. Do be
consistent. Spiritual exercise is the same as physical; we only reap the
benefits if we are consistent.
The purpose: to
give the conscious mind a break from the cacophony of thoughts and the
information deluge we are subjected to daily. In time, a short time, you
will begin to look forward to these quiet breaks (not quiet mind). You
will begin to feel renewed and refreshed after these short sessions,
your mind and thoughts more ordered, less mental energy expended needlessly.
© Vincent Lee Jones Living In Spirit
All Rights Reserved
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