Preparation And Process Of Meditation

Posted by spiritual4u | Posted on 11:13 AM

Preparation for Meditation

The beauty of meditation is that you need no special equipment. You do not need to go anywhere special, or be a member of a fitness club or have certain machines to work with. You only need your own mind.

First we hear about who we are from higher authorities, such as a spiritual teacher. Then we reflect on what we have heard and understood. Then we engage in meditation to allow the knowledge to unfold or manifest in our awareness. In this way, meditation acts as a channel to allow contact between the individual soul and the Supersoul, Paramatma, within us.


In the first few weeks or months of meditation, the mind may not be willing to cooperate. You may have to spend time disciplining it. As you observe your concerns and the turbulence that goes on within the mind, you may be surprised that you even have such thoughts. Later, however, the mind will become more easily subdued, with fewer thoughts. And finally, after some experience, it may not take any time at all for you to calm and quiet the mind, which will become more accommodating for you to go beyond its influence.

If you have your own house or apartment, it will be nice to have a separate or special room in which you do your meditation, yoga, or prayers and worship. Keep it sanctified with holy pictures, incense, maybe some candles, or flowers. Use it only for this purpose. Then go in when you have the proper time to engage in serious yoga, prayers or meditation. Only allow into it those who share the same interest and vibrations as you. Keep the vibration of holiness in it. Get so that whenever you enter the room, that vibration will uplift you. Furthermore, when you have practiced your sacred activities in the room and imbibed the holy atmosphere, learn to carry that holy vibration with you throughout the day.

Beginners can practice meditation 2, 3 or 4 times a week until they get accustomed to the routine and the habit of taking time out just for themselves. Then you can practice everyday, even twice a day. It is the time to be with yourself everyday.

WHEN TO MEDITATE

Traditionally it is accepted that the best time to engage in any spiritual practice is before sunrise, during the brahma-muhurta hour as it is called. This is the time when you are often the most clear, and before you begin the course of the day and the mind becomes cluttered with concerns and activities. It is often quiet at this time, and your mind is also the most peaceful. Furthermore, early meditation prepares you for whatever else may happen through the day.

However, for beginners it can be best to do your sadhana or spiritual practice whenever you can. Evening meditation can also be very good, especially to calm yourself after a busy day and realize or bring yourself back to the real you, that you are only within the body and separate from the seemingly crazy drama that goes on around you.

The main point is to try and pick a time once or twice a day and be consistent about it. It should be a discipline that becomes a normal part of your day. This makes for steady spiritual progress, in spite of whatever else may happen. It is also the way to train the mind to conquer itself and enter increasingly deeper states of awareness and concentration.

OVERCOMING THE IMPEDIMENTS

The Bhagavad-gita explains that there are six major impediments to meditation, or spiritual progress in general, that reside within each of us. It requires self-inquiry to see where these obstacles affect us the most. These are kama (sensual desire), krodha (anger), lobha (greed), moha (delusion), mada (pride), and matsarya (jealousy). Again, these are functions or feelings that exist within the mind. When we are functioning only on the mayic plane, under the influence of the mind and senses, these feelings are at constant play to varying degrees. Spiritual progress means that these must be controlled and not controllers of us. However, we cannot falsely suppress these, or they will crop up in some other more damaging manner. But we must explore how they affect us and why. We must sublimate them by rising above their influence. This can be done by using meditation to perceive the difference between our mental existence and our internal and spiritual existence. The more spiritual we become, the less we are affected by these six enemies of spiritual progress, and the less we need to exist on the mental and sensual plane, which is also like the instinctual or habitual level.

The habitual thought patterns that are so often given free reign are the impulses which make us act with little thought behind it. This is what needs to be corrected. Observance of such thoughts and meditation to rise above it is the process to overcome such a base level of existence.

BASIC ELEMENTS OF THE PRACTICE

The basic practice of meditation also incorporates the eight steps known as yama (restraints), niyama (positive developments), asanas (postures), pranayama (breath and psychic energy control), pratyahara (withdrawal of the senses), dharana (focused attention), and then comes dhyana (meditation) followed by samadhi (a perfect flow of attention on something that provides a superconscious experience).

To explain each of these briefly, yama is moral discipline. This also consists of a series of steps that include ahimsa (nonviolence toward all creatures), satya (truthfulness in thought, word and deed, and not hurting anyone by one’s words), asteya (nonstealing and avoiding that which is harmful to spiritual merit), brahmacharya (control of sensual passions in thought, word and deed), and aparigraha (the renunciation of that which is not necessary).

Niyama means to cultivate shaucha (cleanliness), santosha (contentment with what one has without undue endeavor), tapas (voluntary austerity and tolerance in body, mind and speech for a higher cause), svadhyaya (scriptural study and reflection), and ishvara-pranidhana (offering the fruits of actions to God). Yama and Niyama together are like basic moral values that one must have if he or she expects to go further while expecting any genuine results.

Asanas are the disciplines of using steady and comfortable postures which will be suitable for meditation and toning the body for the correct flow of prana, or psychic energy. This is used with pranayama, the controlled breathing and holding of breaths in a systematic way. This helps to bring the mind under control, or calms the mind, and also builds or stores the prana or life- force within the body for preparing the consciousness for higher awareness. This process always uses what is called rechaka (exhalation), puraka (inhalation) and then kumbhaka (retention). This is a whole system by itself, but can be quite simple. So we have included a few basic pranayama exercises for you to use.

Pratyahara is next, which is the withdrawing of the senses from the external stimuli that often creates distractions in the mind and one’s concentration. Once the senses are under control, or no longer providing input to the mind, or maybe we should say that when the mind is no longer accepting such input, then there can be dharana.

It is said that when there is the cessation of the ingoing and outgoing breaths, there is an unbroken continuity of kumbhaka or retention. This is the Gap in between breaths and body functions, and in between thoughts, in which there is the potential for full awareness outside the influence or affects of the mind. It is this Gap where there is freedom from any distractions and in which there is the suitable situation for dharana.

It is the activity of the mind which forces our interplay with the mayic plane of existence. Through the use of intelligence and wisdom, the individual must make the mind stable and tranquil. When the mind is no longer concerned with the past or future, but focused only on the present moment in an effortless way, then suffering and sorrow will vanish. It is this restraint of the mind’s activities that will help bring about the freedom from further bondage to the wheel of time and material concerns.

Dharana is reached after the body has been prepared through asanas, and the mind has been treated with pranayama. Dharana is the fixed attention toward a single point or object, or state of awareness. This is the area that is probably the hardest for anyone to achieve in this day and age. The mind is accustomed to wandering about and to think or dwell on anything. So it is not easy to fix the mind on any one object or thought. Most people tend to give up on meditation at this level if it is too difficult. This is another reason why meditation may be easy to dabble in but most difficult to use for substantial spiritual progress. In dharana there may still be the sense of the person, the object of meditation, and the process of meditation. However, in dharana there is the potential for dhyana, real and absorbed meditation.

Dhyana takes place when dharana becomes sharpened. In dhyana, when the consciousness is free from the affects of the mind, it can begin to recognize the pure self, shuddhatma. When the flow of attention and thought is uninterrupted toward the object, this meditation is called dhyana. Therein a person enters a state that has no qualification. In his contemplation and focus on the Supreme Spirit, he may enter a state of supreme bliss. Then he sees the light of his own Self. He becomes filled with clarity regarding his own identity and position, and is secure in knowing who and what he really is. He feels and is filled with bliss from which he can never be shaken. He carries this consciousness and awareness wherever he goes. The next step is samadhi.

Samadhi is when the awareness is so deep that the identity of oneself becomes lost in the object upon which one is meditating. Sometimes a person also becomes oblivious to the outer world. The sense of ego, or of oneself, is now completely lost. The meditator or yogi is aware of only the object of meditation. There is no sense of his or her own identity, for the working of the mind has ceased, or ceased from being noticed. Then God, as the object of meditation, will become the sole point of awareness. In this sort of samadhi, one begins to know God, and also begins to see nothing outside the energy or existence of God. There is only unlimited bliss and freedom to expand such bliss. The peace surpasses all that could describe it. Then also bhakti or devotion increases immensely so that one no longer sees anything as being separate from the existence of God. The person’s love for God is ever-growing and ever-existent. There is no longer any maya in his awareness. Whatever he sees is all a display of the energy of God, Who is the source of all that is. In such a state of awareness, one is never outside the perception of the Supreme Being. Whatever beauty the person sees is but a reflection of the cause of its beauty, which is the Supreme Creator. In this awareness, a person is already in the spiritual domain. If one can maintain this level of samadhi at the time of death, then the person can achieve kaivalya, or liberation from material existence.

When we meditate, we want a continuous flow of concentration toward the point or purpose of our attention. This process essentially involves reaching a state of pure meditation in which a person enters an uninterrupted flow of contemplation on God. Then, as one proceeds, the meditator loses all awareness of the body and external or sensual stimuli. Then you can enter the freedom to experience superconsciousness.

Meditation and the performance of chanting mantras at particular times of the day is the way to open and prepare oneself for higher awareness and to perceive higher levels of reality and consciousness. Repeated practice of this process will cleanse the mental fields of habitual thought patterns of material desires and bring in increasingly deeper levels of illumination.

As a person practices and becomes more experienced, the preparation for meditation decreases. One can soon find that all that has to be done is sit in silence, breathe evenly, calmly, focus within, tune into a higher consciousness, and then away you go, immediately losing contact with the dictates of the mind and senses, and sailing into higher awareness or even new levels of awakening. However, this will take time to achieve, and it takes practice and experience to reach this level of familiarity with the process. So let us explain a few of these steps a little further for those who are interested.

ASANAS

The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali defines yoga asanas as sthiram sukham aasanam, which means a position which is comfortable and steady. The yoga asanas are postures that are meant to train the body and mind to be disciplined and balanced. Used with the pranayama techniques, the asanas are meant to help charge the body with prana and life force to enhance one’s meditative abilities and reach deeper levels of concentration and awareness. There are numerous books that describe many hundreds of asanas, but we will include a few which will be all you need in order to proceed with this course on meditation.

However, we must remember that we are trying to have a posture that is comfortable for sitting in meditation. So in spite of the descriptions that follow, we may also use cushions, folded blankets, or mats, that can help in this way. They can be placed under us in a way that elevates the body by about two inches, with the legs resting lower on the floor. The legs and hips will be more relaxed this way, and without as much pressure on the pelvis. To help keep your back straight, you may even sit against a wall. If your legs are too uncomfortable even in this position, you can also use a straight back chair, or sit on the edge of the seat.
  • SUKHASANA -This is one of the most common of the yoga asanas. It means to sit down cross-legged in a comfortable position. Sukh means easy position. This is especially recommended for beginners for doing pranayama exercises and meditation. It is one of the best to relax the body’s muscles for prolonged positioning. In the yoga tradition, a comfortable position is properly executed when one can maintain it for three hours and 48 minutes, with a sufficient inward focus. Of course, while this simple posture is easily done by Indians and yogis, it is not quite as easy for those of us who don’t often sit on the floor.
  • PADMASANA-This is probably the most popular of all asanas. Many yogis use it and are pictured in this position, just as the Buddha is often viewed sitting in this posture. This asana can be regularly practiced, and many people can take to it easily. However, for beginners it is suggested to start slow as it may take the leg ligaments to grow into shape. It is another cross-legged position, but with the soles of the feet resting on top of the thighs, not below them as most people sit. The position has a calming effect on the mind and nerves, which is needed for long-termed meditation. The pose helps keep the spine erect and provides good posture. Keeping the body’s joints flexible is another of its benefits.
  • SHAVASANA-Shava means corpse, and this is the corpse pose. It is one of the simplest to perform, and some of the pranayama exercises ask for this asana to be performed afterwards. Basically you lay down with the arms a little out from the body and the legs slightly separated. You relax completely, both in body and mind, laying motionless and with a perfectly quiet mind. However, it is also difficult because if you relax too much you are likely to go to sleep, which is not wanted. To avoid sleep it is suggested that if you notice yourself getting drowsy, you increase your rate of breathing. Many yoga sessions begin and end with the shavasana, which is generally done for about 10 to 15 minutes.

PRANAYAMA

PREPARATION IN BREATHING

Pranayama is the science of breath. It is part of the hatha and raja yoga systems. It consists of particular exercises to control breathing in ways that it will bring more oxygen into the blood and to the brain. It also helps control the flickering nature of the mind. Prana in Sanskrit means the energy of life, while ayama means stretch, extend, expand or lengthen. And that is the purpose of it: to manipulate the breathing to increase and manage the circulation of vital energy, prana, through the nadis or subtle nerve channels through the body. This assists in the health, vitality and longevity of the body. It is also said to awaken the cerebrospinal nerve centers to their full potential.

Most people take little notice of the way they breathe. Many breathe quick and shallow breaths, which is not healthy. Such breathing allows for only a small amount of oxygen to be accepted by the body in the upper portions of the lungs. This causes low energy levels and susceptibility to disease.

When one practices correct breathing, one must breathe through the nose and then do a full inhalation followed by a complete exhalation. A deep breath means that the abdomen expands along with the lungs, and the shoulders move back. A full exhalation means your abdomen contracts and chest moves in as your diaphragm moves up and may come close to touching the heart.

While doing pranayama, the correct breath should be that you first exhale, then inhale and retain the breath, then exhale completely. Exhalation is the most important part.

However, prana is the energy that is imbibed by the blood, not only through breath but also through food, water and even sunlight. Pranayama, as well as yogic asanas, help amplify the prana and increase the amount we take in. This, of course, increases our own energy, and also helps pave the way for increased awareness and brain activity, as well as the means for perceiving deeper levels of reality and consciousness. Prana exists and moves primarily through the subtle or astral body in the nadis, or nerve channels. The asanas are especially for opening the nadis and chakras to allow for an increased flow of prana through the system.

The main nadi is the Sushumna that flows along the spine. On either side are the Ida (connected with the left nostril) and Pingala (connected to the right nostril), the two smaller nadis near the spinal ganglia which spiral around the Sushumna. The Ida nadi is the moon current, the influence of which is cooling and calming, while the Pingala nadi is the sun current, which is warming and stimulating. The dominant air currents usually change from one nostril to the other about every one hour and 50 minutes. When the right nostril and prana current dominates, a person tends to be more lively, outgoing, and intellectually active, and more left- brain oriented. When the left nostril or prana current dominates, a person tends to be more inward, quieter, imaginative, and meditative, and more right-brain active. When both nostrils and prana channels flow equally, it indicates that both sides of the brain are interacting equally. This is a good time for meditation.

Entering meditation can help harmonize the flow of the prana through the Ida and Pingala channels. However, practicing pranayama can help do that, which also helps balance the mind and body. This is how you can regulate the flow and accumulation of prana in the body.

THE UJJAYI PRANAYAMA TECHNIQUE

In preparing for a meditation session, doing some pranayama beforehand can be most helpful to quiet the mind. If you have ever been to a yoga class, then you have probably done this common technique. If not, then here is a description of one that has been used for many hundreds of years.

This is one of the most basic techniques for doing pranayama. You sit comfortably in the lotus or cross-legged position. Keep you back straight, but lower the head to the chest with the chin touching the place between the collar bones. Then stretch the arms out to the knees and rest the back of the wrists on the knees. Keep your fingers straight but for joining the tips of the index fingers to the tips of the thumbs. This is known as the Jnana (pronounced as gyana) Mudra, meaning the sign of knowledge. The index finger represents the individual soul while the thumb represents the Universal Soul. The tips of the finger and thumbs being joined represents the exchange of knowledge.

  1. Now close your eyes and focus inward.
  2. Exhale completely, bringing your stomach in.
  3. Now take a slow deep breath through the nose, allowing it to make a sound, until the lungs are full, but not allowing the abdomen to expand.
  4. Then retain the breath for a few seconds.
  5. Now exhale slowly and evenly until the lungs are emptied completely.
  6. After a few seconds, gradually relax the diaphragm.
  7. Wait another few seconds (bahya kumbhaka) and now take another slow and deep breath through both nostrils.
  8. Repeat this cycle five to ten times.
  9. When finished lie on the floor with legs slightly separated from each other, and arms slightly away from the body (in the Shavasana asana). Relax for a few minutes.

THE KAPALABHATI BREATHING TECHNIQUE

This is basically a way of doing a forced exhalation. The way this works is that you sit comfortably, cross-legged on the floor or mat or somewhere. Breathe normally for a few breaths, and then,

  1. Exhale quickly and deeply by pulling the abdomen in with your stomach muscles, and letting the air out through the nostrils with an audible sound.
  2. Relax your abdomen and let the air enter the lungs again. The inhale should be twice as long as the exhale.
  3. Again pull in the abdomen and exhale with a quick gasp through the nose.
  4. Do this 20 times or so. You should do two or three of these per second.
  5. Then end this session by inhaling slowly and completely.
  6. Retain the breath as long as comfortable.
  7. Then exhale slowly and deeply.
  8. You can repeat this process another 2 times or so.

This exercise helps clean the lungs of all stale air, allowing for a full inhalation of clean oxygen. The name Kapalabhati means Askull shining@ in reference to the additional oxygen that helps clear the mind and consciousness. The movement of the diaphragm also tones the internal organs like the stomach, liver and heart.

THE ANULOMA VILOMA BREATHING TECHNIQUE

This is also a common technique but quite beneficial. This is for breathing through alternate nostrils. The left nostril is connected with the Ida nadi, the path of the Pingala nadi is the right nostril. Throughout the day, if you will notice, your breathing changes from one nostril to the other. Breathing through the right or solar nostril indicates the time for action, doing things. While breathing primarily through the left or lunar nostril indicates a time for thought or meditation. As previously mentioned, this change usually happens about every one hour and fifty minutes when we are healthy. However, most people experience disturbances in this pattern. So this technique helps restore a balanced flow.

When ready bring your right hand up to your nose and use the thumb and ring fingers. Fold your index and middle fingers toward the palm. This is called the Vishnu Mudra. Then

  1. Take a deep breath and exhale completely two times.
  2. Then inhale and block your right nostril using your thumb.
  3. Exhale a slow complete breath through the left nostril.
  4. Inhale through the left nostril.
  5. Hold your breath while closing both nostrils.
  6. Close the left nostril with your ring and little fingers and breathe out a slow and complete breath through the right nostril.
  7. Keep the left nostril closed and breathe in through the right nostril.
  8. Hold both nostrils closed and retain the breath.
  9. Now close the right nostril with the thumb and breathe out through the left nostril.
  10. Now start again from # 2, and do this routine several times for one session.
  11. Gradually, slow the breath to a 5 second inhalation and a 10 second exhalation.
  12. End the session by bringing down your hand and inhaling through both nostrils.
  13. Exhale completely.
  14. Sit quietly, aware of the energy going through your system.

A variation on this technique is that all inhalations are through both nostrils, and exhalations are through alternating nostrils.

THE BRAHMARI, SITKARI AND SITHALI BREATHING TECHNIQUES

Three other simple techniques are the Brahmari, Sitkari and Sithali. In the Brahmari you partially close the glottis in your throat while you inhale through the nostrils, producing a snoring sound. Then as you exhale slowly, produce a humming sound which helps slow the exhalation. Repeat several times.

The Sitkari is when you press the tip of the tongue to the roof of the mouth and slowly inhale through the open mouth, producing a hissing sound. Retain the breath as long as possible and exhale through the nose. Repeat several times.

Both of these techniques cool the body and stifle hunger and thirst, while the Sitkari is said to also increase one’s beauty.

The Sithali breath is when you stick your tongue out a bit and curl the sides of it. Then you suck the breath in as if sucking it through a straw. Then close your mouth and hold your breath and exhale slowly through the nose. Repeat several times.

The Meditation Process

There are many techniques for meditation these days, and many levels of awareness we can reach. Many meditation techniques incorporate the basic requirement of focusing on our breathing. Our breathing also reflects our mental state. For example, when we are excited or angry, our breathing is often rapid, uneasy or shallow. When we are calm, our breathing is more slow and deep. Control of the breath automatically affects the mind, and begins to calm it. This can prepare it for deeper thoughts and awareness. It helps bring our awareness to the Self within, or the observer of our thoughts and actions.

The mind will naturally focus on objects of its liking. The senses will drag the mind toward the objects with which they want to engage. The mind works in the mayic realm and is not equipped to rise above the area or awareness of the senses. It is the mind which interprets the stimuli and makes demands of the senses. It is the intelligence that then makes the plans to fulfill the wants of the mind. And the mind interprets what is favorable or unfavorable. So for one to reach the area of perceiving a higher reality, one must rise above the influence and limitations of the mind.

Meditation on the path of knowledge and enlightenment is to focus the mind on the Ultimate Reality, the Supreme Being.

If you have had problems or troubles during the day, try not to take them with you to your place of meditation, or into your mind while trying to meditate. It will only further distract you when trying to reach higher states of awareness, free from mental impulses or habitual thought patterns.

If, however, you plan to meditate for guidance or solutions, feel that God is aware of your concern or situation. Make your prayers to God before you meditate so that as you go into meditation you can listen for answers or awakenings. Know that God manages the whole universe, and though we have free will to do as we like, if we are sincerely seeking help, then God can let us know in due time, and in the way we need to learn our lessons, what we should do for our progress. No problem is unsolvable, but only needs a plan or some insight to deal with it or understand it. You are a spiritual being whose real identity is beyond mundane or material situations.

The best times to meditate are at dawn and dusk. You should sit facing the east, or the north. This takes advantage of the subtle influence of the earth’s magnetic field. For sessions of deep meditation, I personally like to meditate in the dark, before sunrise or after sunset, all lights out, with no noise. Then, even when eyes are open, there is no sensual distraction from hearing, seeing, smelling, tasting or feeling. Then I can go as deep as I like.

The first step is to sit cross-legged but comfortably on the floor, and sit on a mat, a cushion, or even on the edge of a chair. This is after you have done some pranayama and breathing exercises, if you choose to, beforehand to help prepare for the meditation session. You may also want to turn off the phone. Also, wear loose clothes to allow for ease of sitting and not to impede your smooth and natural breathing. It is important that you can sit without any difficulties or feelings of constraint. Simply keep your spine tall and straight. Let your hands relax, resting on your thighs or knees, palms up with thumbs and index fingers joined at the tips, in the Chin or Jnana Mudra. Or they can be folded in your lap. Broaden your shoulders so you can breathe deeply.

Now close your eyes. Remember, this is time for your Self. So let go of all outer concerns and let yourself relax while keeping the back straight.

ONE MEDITATION TECHNIQUE BASED ON OUR BREATH

So now begin to observe your breathing as it adjusts itself automatically to your position and relaxed state of mind. As you relax, release yourself of all stress. Turn your attention more inward, and deepen your inhalation, taking your time before you give a longer exhalation. Inhale easily and if you count to 4 on the inhale, give a count to 6 while you exhale. Let the breath bring in energy to heal, sooth, and give light to all parts of the body. Enter an increasingly calm state of mind.

As you continue to breathe, extend your breaths as it is comfortable to you. So if you breathe in at a count of 5, hold your breath within for a count of 5, and then exhale slowly for a count of 10. This is when your breathing becomes pranayama and allows the mind to increase in calmness and inward perception, and heightened awareness. Keep breathing like this for several minutes. This prepares you for continued inward focus.

Now begin to breath as is most natural for you, without counting, and in whatever way is most easy for you. And sit straight but easily.

Now simply sit in awareness of your being for a few minutes. Keep your eyes closed. Focus on being the observer, watching and listening to your inner attention on whatever you are aware of. Start with listening to the sounds outside of you. This may be birds, the wind, or something else. Keep your mind at peace if this causes an inner dialogue to begin, or if the sounds start your thought processes. Stifle your thinking and simply remain the observer. Remember, if thoughts enter your mind as reactions to what you hear, simply observe them coming and going, knowing they are not you but merely reactions to sense perceptions. Just watch your thoughts as if they are but the flow of water in a river, or clouds in the sky that form, change shape and later disperse. You are the observer. As you watch this, focus on who is doing the observing. This is the Self within the body, deeper than the mind, deeper than the intelligence.

Now bring your awareness even deeper, more inward, and listen to what is inside you. Maybe you can hear your heartbeat, or just listen to your breathing. If your mind wanders as you listen to your breath, quiet it and bring it back to center. Do not let it go one way or the other.

At this point you can use your meditation to focus on your breathing as a means to get closer to the Divine. View your breathing as a means of offering all that we are to the Supreme as we exhale. Then as we inhale, we bring into our body the higher life energy of the Divine. We perceive our very breath as the energy of God that supports us, enlivens us. We see that God is life all around us as well as our life force within us. This life force is the cause of all creation, the cause of all life, and the center of all bliss and eternity, of which we are a part. In this way, we become more in tune with the Supreme that manifests throughout the creation. We are dovetailed in our purpose to become and remain more united with the energy of the Divine. As we become absorbed in this awareness, it dissolves the thought forms from our consciousness along with the seeds of desire that keep us here. This is one way we can use our breathing in meditation and to bring ourselves closer to God in the process.

Now, when you are ready, go deeper, and as you breathe, you will notice the space between your breaths. Similarly, as you watch your thoughts, notice the space between thoughts, between the end of one and the start of another. Meditation is the focus on that space or Gap between thoughts. It is the process of lengthening that space. It is within that space wherein we can become free of the influence or input of the senses and mind, and more aware of our deeper selves. Therein we can become aware of a deeper dimension, and the realm of spirit, if we can go deep enough.

As you continue to focus on the space between the breaths and thoughts, let it deepen even more. Let it widen. Let it open up to the point where you are no longer even aware of your breathing, or of any thoughts. Let this space open until you are absorbed in it. That is when you can go beyond the mind. That is the doorway into another realm wherein you can get in touch with your higher Self.

This new experience beyond the mind may itself give you an initial feeling of bliss or wonder, a feeling of new possibilities that could unfold before you. But remember, this is merely the beginning, and there is much farther to go. There is also the need to become steady at this technique through practice if you are to truly attain the results that are possible.

As you free yourself from outside influences, be open to Infinity, to the omnipresent God both within you and all around you.

Be alert to exploring the higher consciousness you experience or find yourself in, or the awakenings and realizations you have. When you enter higher states of awareness you are bound to have moments of clarity that allow you to reassess your identity, your position in the universe, and the possibilities that are available to you.

Now, in this deeper level, just meditate on being, on awareness. As you focus inward like this, as you go deeper, observe how what has happened outside in the world of the senses, the exterior drama, is no longer a distraction or disturbance. You are at peace. We see ourselves as beings of light, in harmony with the flow of the universe. The seeds of suffering dissolve. You are your own person, you are whole, full of light, love, energy, and unlimited possibilities. In this state of consciousness you have access to unlimited intelligence, clarity, and the energy or vibration for healing, and for inspiration and guidance.

It is said that prayer is like petitioning God for guidance or blessing, while meditation is listening for the answer. It is in this higher state of inner awareness in which we may hear or sense the answer, or attain the guidance. Sit quietly, your awareness focused inward, and realize your wholeness, the joy available to you, and the completeness that is always there within.

At this point, if there was something in particular you had a question about, or some quality you need to have in the outer world, now is the time when you may address that issue. If you need something like a better outlook, improved dealings with others, or a higher sense of self-assurance in yourself, now is the time to use an affirmation if you want, and to bring that back to the outer world as you begin to come out of your state of meditation.

Feel that quality throughout your whole being, as if it is blessing every part of you. When it has penetrated every cell and every corner of your mind, when you are full with this new or helpful quality or perception, and you feel empowered, then you can begin to bring your attention back first to your breath, then to listening to what is around you, and then feel your body and your surroundings.

Or if you have a particular question about which you seek guidance, you may also start the meditation session with that in the back of your mind. Then dwell on that a bit during your state of deep awareness, and take a sense of clarity about it with you as you come out of your meditation. Spend some time in this level of awareness in your meditation. When it is enough, then prepare to slowly return to the outer world. [If you are ready to go deeper or are not concerned with questions or guidance, then proceed to the Deep Meditation Section.]

ENDING YOUR MEDITATION

As you prepare to leave your higher state of consciousness or end your meditation session, feel yourself to be more closely in tune with the Divine will, the Universal Consciousness, and that the higher energies of God are flowing through you. Feel that you are connected to everything in the universe and especially connected with God, always. The closer you get to God, the more closely God will guide you and inspire you with proper ideas, motivation, inspiration and action. Feel that you have been rejuvenated on every level, physically, mentally and spiritually. Visualize yourself as being completely whole, a vehicle of positivity, wishing the highest good for yourself and everyone else, like a reflection of God’s love on anyone, and that every living entity is a part of God. Spread your vision to encompass the whole universe and pray that peace prevails through an enlightened society.

When you are coming out of your meditation, remain conscious of the presence of God, and the sense of your spiritual identity. Be aware that through the grace of God you will be assisted in whatever transformations you need to develop. The deeper you go in this awareness, the more you will become sensitive to the idea that everything is in balance. That everything that is happening to you, and throughout the world, is taking place through cause and effect. And to change the effect starts with altering the cause, or the initial action that starts the reaction. The point is to balance external actions with internal knowings. Thus, meditation becomes a process of working within your own consciousness to reach a higher state of spiritual perception that manifests in your everyday life. When a perfect balance is reached, you will feel a sense of completeness, a higher sense of purpose, a clearer sense of where you are going and where you want to go.

Once you have regularly practiced this, you can go deeper each time. You can also move to that deep space within you more quickly. Such a session may last only 15-20 minutes, or if you really get into it, it can be much longer. I’ve had sessions for 2 hours and came out of it thinking I’d spent only 30 minutes in meditation. The time is up to you, as well as how much time you can give to it. You may also do this technique once a day, preferably in the morning before the day begins, or anytime, even twice a day, morning and evening.

The more you practice it, the more you take that feeling of wholeness, self-sufficient happiness, completeness and confidence with you wherever you go. You’ll see it adds quality to your life and enhances your attitude toward the world and realigns your position in the universe and your perception of who and what you are. It also helps increase the possibilities that are available to you and what you are capable of at both the outer and inner levels of your being.

DEEP MEDITATION

In doing deep meditation, instead of ending our meditation session as we did in the previous description above, we continue to go even deeper. We go so deep that we lose all contact with our bodily identification. We become only awareness and nothing else. In fact, if we can go deep enough, in this level of awareness when we observe our new identity that is separate from the physical body, we cannot even tell whether we are male or female. We are not connected with such an identity at all. We are only a spiritual being that is aware of our eternal and transcendental nature. We have no past, we have no future. There is only the moment, the NOW, completely independent of time and all temporary or mayic forms of existence. We begin to recognize the potency and eternality of the soul and its connection with the Supreme Divinity.

In this level of meditation, we are not concerned with attaining guidance or clarity, or even taking back certain perspectives or affirmations with us when we leave our meditation. It is the experience itself which gives us all the guidance and clarity we need. It is this level of awareness and perception that alone is enough to provide us with all the understanding we need to see things in a totally different and new or fresh way when we end our meditation. Our perception of our eternal nature, the blissfulness that is always within us waiting to be tapped by mere awareness, separate from any bodily condition, is all we need. This profound reality will cling to your consciousness, or open your awareness, in all aspects of your life once you have experienced it. This itself will change the way you view life forever. And you will more easily want to engage in meditation as a definite part of your life on a regular basis.

I have to confess that the first time I entered into this level of meditation, when I ended the session and came back to my senses, I was not sure if what I had experienced was real. Was it merely my mind, or was it a definite level of reality that I had entered, which is beyond the body and mind? But just afterward, a friend of mine had returned from Puerto Rico and had met someone who had a near-death-experience. He had fallen off the back of a truck and hit his head, and went into that altered state of consciousness. The description of what he had experienced in his near-death-experience was the same as what I had experienced, but I did it through deep meditation rather than falling off a truck. And his feelings and awareness afterwards was the same as mine. You simply do not look at life the same way. The things that you took so seriously are no longer that serious. The things that kept you from living more clearly and more aware are simply not worth allowing them to have so much control over you and your life. And the problems that took up so much of your mental energy are no longer so important. It is truly like getting a fresh start in life, a new perspective of who you really are and what your place is in this universe. The weight is off your shoulders. You know that the universe, God, will take care of you, and that you will meet whatever it is that will help take you along to a new level of growth. No matter whether it appears to be negative or positive, it is all positive because it is meant to give the lessons or support for you to develop yourself further.

I have not really described this before, and I usually keep such things to myself . So there is much more I could say about it, but in many ways it is indescribable, as I am sure you can understand. When it is an experience beyond the mind and senses, how can the mind and senses fully grasp what is being described? In any case, this level of deep meditation that I have now described is merely on the higher level of sattva-guna, the mode of goodness which is still within material existence. It is not complete for perfect spiritual development, or for attaining full entrance into the spiritual domain. There is more.

FURTHER INSTRUCTIONS ON MEDITATION IN BHAGAVAD-GITA

There are many more instructions on what needs to be achieved through the process of yoga and meditation as described by Lord Krishna in the Vedic texts, such as the Bhagavad-gita and Srimad-Bhagavatam. To begin with, Krishna describes the preliminaries of the process by relating that one should shut out Aall external sense objects, keeping the eyes and vision concentrated between the two eyebrows, suspending the inward and outward breaths within the nostrils. Thus controlling the mind, senses and intelligence, the transcendentalist becomes free from desire, fear and anger. One who is always in this state is certainly liberated.@ (Bg.5.27-28) Herein it is described how one needs to suspend the breathing, which is obviously more difficult than many people realize. The breath itself is said to be the last obstacle of meditation. Just as it is the gap between thoughts that is the place in which one is freed from the mind, and is the doorway to spiritual perception, it is also the gap between breaths. This, of course, is rarely possible in this day and age, so we have to work around that as best we can.

Furthermore, in preparation for this sort of yoga, Krishna explains that one should always try to live alone in a secluded place, control the mind, and concentrate on the Supreme Self. He should also remain free from desires and possessiveness. He should then lay kusha grass on the ground, cover it with deerskin [which helps keep away snakes] and a soft cloth. The yogi should then firmly sit on it and practice yoga by controlling the senses and mind and fixing one’s attention on a single point. Then hold one’s body, neck and head straight in a line and gaze at the tip of the nose [with eyes half-closed but unfocused]. Thus, with the mind free from agitation and fear, and any desires for sex, one should meditate on Me [Lord Krishna] within the heart [as Paramatma] and make Me the ultimate goal of life. By such practice of controlling the body, mind and senses, and by the cessation of material existence, the mystic yogi attains the kingdom of God. However, there is no possibility of becoming a yogi if one eats too much or too little, or sleeps too much or too little. He must be temperate in eating, sleeping, working or recreation to alleviate all material pains through the practice of yoga. Only through such practice, when one disciplines his mental activities, remaining devoid of all desires of the senses, and becomes situated in Transcendence, is he said to have attained yoga. The yogi must remain steady in meditation on the transcendent Self, just as a lamp remains steady in a windless place. (Bg.6.10- 19)

This is the stage of perfection called trance, or samadhi. At this point one has the ability to connect with the soul and see the self by the pure mind, and to relish and rejoice in the self. It is in that state wherein one enjoys himself through transcendental senses and experiences boundless spiritual happiness. When one is established in such a way, one never departs from this truth, nor does he think there is any greater gain. Once situated in this way, one is never shaken, even in the midst of great difficulty. This is certainly actual freedom from all miseries born from material contact. Therefore, one should practice yoga with undeviating determination and faith. One should abandon every material desire based on the false ego [the conception that one is the material body] and control all the senses by the mind. Gradually, step by step, and with full conviction, by means of intelligence, one should become situated in trance by fixing the mind on the Self alone. (Bg.6.20-25)

So, as Sri Krishna continues, in the practice of yoga, from wherever the mind wanders, due to its unsteady nature, one must bring it back under the control of the Self. In this way, for the yogi whose mind is fixed on Me attains the highest happiness. By his identity with Brahman [the spiritual strata], he is liberated, and his mind is peaceful, free from passions and he is freed from sin. Steady in the Self, and free from all material contamination, such a yogi achieves the highest happiness, in touch with the Supreme Consciousness. Thereafter, a true yogi perceives Me in all beings, and sees every being in Me. Indeed, the self-realized person sees Me everywhere. For such a person who sees Me everywhere and everything in Me, I am never lost, nor is he ever lost to Me. The person who knows that I and the Supersoul within all creatures are one worships Me and remains always in Me in all respects. He who sees the true equality of all beings, both in their happiness and distress, is a perfect yogi. (Bg.6.26-32)

After practicing yoga throughout one’s life, the goal is then to become liberated from any further material existence. It is not enough that yoga can make one more thoughtful, increase one’s awareness, or make one’s body more healthy. There are so many other ways by which a person can do that. But the real goal of yoga is to return to the spiritual realm. How that is done is also described by Lord Krishna. He explains that at the time of death, one who fixes his life airs between his eyebrows and in full devotion engages in remembering Me, the Supreme Lord, will certainly attain the Supreme Being. The destination of one who is learned in the Vedas, and who chants omkara (OM) and who are great sages in the renounced order, enter into the Brahman [the spiritual sky]. The process for accomplishing this requires the yogi to be situated in complete detachment from all activities of the senses. Closing off the doors of the senses and fixing the mind on the heart, and raising the life air to the top of the head, one establishes himself in yoga. Then, being situated as such and vibrating the sacred syllable OM, the supreme combination of letters, if one thinks of the Supreme Lord and quits his body, he will certainly reach the spiritual planets. (Bg.8.10-13) So this is the process of meditation by which the mystic yogi can reach the spiritual realm and be liberated from any further rounds of birth and death in the material worlds.

DIFFICULTIES TO REACH SPIRITUAL PERFECTION IN YOGA

However, even after hearing all about this system of yoga, Arjuna, who was being taught these things by Lord Krishna at the time, said that this system appears impractical and unendurable since the mind is so restless and unsteady. It is turbulent, obstinate and very strong. To subdue it is more difficult than controlling the wind. (Bg.6.33-4) Therefore, we must ask if Arjuna, who was a far more capable person 5,000 years ago than we are today, could perceive the difficulty of this system, then it behooves us to understand that it is also most difficult to use this system today and expect to reach perfection with it. The ultimate perfection with this form of yoga is that you become so focused on the Supreme within and around you that you attain liberation from any more cycles of birth and death in this material creation. However, now that we are in Kali-yuga, an age of quarrel, difficulties, distractions and discomfort, it is even harder for the majority of people to control the mind to such a degree as is expected through this system.

Nonetheless, Lord Krishna continued to advise Arjuna that even though it is very difficult to curb the restless mind, it is possible by constant practice and detachment. ASelf- realization is difficult work for one whose mind is unbridled. But My opinion is that he whose mind is controlled, and who strives by the proper process, is assured of success.@ (Bg.6.35-36)

However, Arjuna was not so convinced and still questioned Lord Krishna. He asked what was the destination of someone who starts the process of self-realization but does not persevere, but gives up due to worldly-mindedness and does not attain success. Does such a person perish like a riven cloud, with no position anywhere? (Bg.6.37-38)

Here Arjuna is not merely asking about the Astanga or eightfold path of yoga. He is asking about any kind of genuine process of self-realization. What happens when a sincere person still cannot continue to reach the goal? Lord Krishna answers him that such a transcendentalist does not meet with destruction either in this world or in the spiritual world. One who does good is never overcome by evil. Even an unsuccessful yogi, after many, many years of enjoyment on the heavenly planets of the pious, is born in a family of righteous people, or a wealthy family of aristocracy [due to his pious credits]. Or he takes birth in a family of transcendentalists who are already on the spiritual path and great in wisdom. Yet, such a birth is most rare in this world. On taking such a birth, he again revives his divine consciousness from his previous life. Then he takes up the process again and continues to make further progress in order to achieve complete success. It is by virtue of the spiritual consciousness from his previous existence that he automatically becomes attracted to the yogic principles--even without seeking them. Such an inquisitive transcendentalist, striving for yoga, stands always above the rituals prescribed in the scriptures. But when the yogi engages himself with sincere endeavor, and being washed of all contamination, then, after many, many births and deaths, he ultimately attains the supreme goal. A yogi is greater than the ascetic performing austerities, greater than the empiricist philosopher, and greater than one engaged in karmic activities for fruitive results. So in all circumstances be a yogi. (Bg.6.40-46)

So herein Lord Krishna describes the positive opportunity that awaits anyone who makes any sincere endeavor on the path of spiritual advancement, even if they do not fully succeed in one lifetime. And then He concludes the real goal of yoga in the next verse, again pointing out the ease and need for the process of bhakti, loving devotion to Him. AAnd of all yogis, he who always abides in Me with great faith, worshiping Me in transcendental loving service [bhakti], is most intimately united with Me in yoga and is the highest of all.@ (Bg.6.47)

In a similar circumstance, after Lord Krishna explained the science of yoga to Uddhava, Uddhava had the same doubts as Arjuna. So he questioned it and said that he feared that the method of yoga that had been described by Lord Krishna is very difficult for one who cannot completely control his mind. So Uddhava requested Him to explain a simpler way of attaining spiritual perfection. Uddhava explained that many yogis who try to steady the mind experience frustration because of their inability to perfect the state of trance. Thus they weary in their attempts to control the mind. Therefore, swanlike men happily take shelter [through the process of bhakti-yoga] of Your lotus feet, the source of all transcendental ecstasy. But those who take pride in their accomplishments in yoga and karma fail to take shelter of You and are thus defeated by Your illusory energy. (Bhag.11.29.1-3)

In this way, it is best to understand what form of meditation works the best for the general mass of people in this age.




Source: Spiritual4u.com

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