Thursday, August 27, 2009

Awareness Meditation

A bird house is hidden in the asters.

Look deep within yourself and see what lies beneath the clutter of the mind.

Meditation has been used for thousands of years for self-reflection, self-awareness, healing, and enlightenment. Today’s technology enables us to see the physiological and chemical changes that occur throughout the whole body.

Varied health professions now teach meditation as a means of stress management and improving a patient’s overall quality of life in a wide-variety of diseases such as cancer, hypertension, and back pain.

Meditation is also a means of reducing the symptoms and discomfort of depression, anxiety, and anger, as well as increasing energy and vitality. People who meditate regularly are clinically shown to have fewer overall symptoms of stress, fewer cardiopulmonary and gastrointestinal symptoms, less emotional irritability, and cognitive disorganization.

Awareness meditation draws your attention away from a particular object or illness to an overall knowledge and feeling of inner calmness and peace. During this specific method of meditation, the mind concentrates less on individual problems or issues and settles instead on promoting an inward focus, enabling the mind and the body to experience a profound state of restfulness. In turn, the brain becomes balanced, while the mind and body move beyond thinking, to simply being.

Awareness Meditation: An Introduction
  • Prepare your meditation room as outlined in previous postings
  • Ensure there are no distractions that will disturb you for the next 10 to 20 minutes
  • Allow all energy that arises through your meditation practice to flow.
  • Be open to all that you may experience
  • Simply observe
Sitting or lying down, depending on your physical abilities, close your eyes and focus on creating a rhythmic flow of breath.
  • Relax and focus on an object of meditation that you prefer, such as the breath or a candle flame.
  • Observe without any judgment.
  • If the mind moves away from this object, return to it when you become conscious of it.
  • Notice any feelings of relaxation that occur such as the breath slowing down, muscles relaxing,
  • Notice the growing space between thoughts and your meditation object
  • Stay with your growing awareness of inner peace
  • If any other feelings occur, allow their energy to flow through you.
  • Notice what rises up through your meditation
  • Release what you no longer need.
  • Allow the focused attention to dissolve into awareness
  • Enter into the space between the thoughts.
  • Draw the inner stillness to you and fill yourself with tranquility and silence.
When you conclude your awareness meditation, know that you can return to the feelings of peace simply by returning to the flow of your breath. Awareness and self-knowledge grow with each meditation enabling you to think with precision and act from a source of love.

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