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037-Insight Meditation - Buddhism in daily life

037-Insight Meditation - Buddhism in daily life

FromBuddhism in daily life - Mindfulness in every day tasks


037-Insight Meditation - Buddhism in daily life

FromBuddhism in daily life - Mindfulness in every day tasks

ratings:
Length:
7 minutes
Released:
May 9, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Like most meditations, insight meditation is practiced sitting on a cushion, legs crossed, upper body relaxed and erect. If you don't want (or like) to hold the "cross-legged" position, you can also sit on a chair without leaning, resting your legs on the floor. Close your eyes, keep your head minimally lowered forward.
Use my app for this meditation to time it (Android or Apple).
Insight meditation is a traditional Buddhist practice that focuses on "mindfulness of breath."
This calms the mind, controlling access to the 6 windows of the person. Thereby the (mental) attention wanders more and more to the physical sensations and the connected mental occurrences, which arise in the now and in the here, to which just should not be attached.
More and more the "consciousness" follows the breath, the attention goes mindfully into rest, the belly rises and falls, the air flowing in and out becomes more and more relaxed, the nostrils and the upper lip feel the breeze, the surroundings recede more and more, it becomes quiet, the body no longer feels, the mind palace goes into a rest mode.
What emotions come up now, what happens when you try to "perceive" them? Concentration takes place in complete mindfulness, all thoughts become less and less, become "background noise", similar to the babble of voices at the train station, which we notice when we enter, but which "falls silent" after a few moments.
Now it is time to focus on the movement of the abdomen during breathing, to dive deeper into insight meditation, the 5 senses (6 windows of the human being) should draw less and less attention.
If now unwillingness to continue arises I recommend the lecture of sHanLi on the subject. Note in your mind what brings you out of calm, just continue the meditation. The important thing here is to take the disturbing things out of character. For example, we refer to the ringing of the phone as a noise, the pain in our back only as a pain, thinking of a person only as a memory.
When you have gained control over your 6 windows, then (at the end of the meditation) turn your attention in full mindfulness to the thoughts, let them come to the surface again. Why is this particular thought bothering me? What sensations arise, why do they disappear again by themselves? Do the thoughts pull me along? And why can't I dwell on a thought?
Slowly the "seeing" develops in front of your inner eye, you understand more, you now allow it to "understand".
Slowly you open your eyes, stretch. The meditation comes to an end.
The way is the goal! Are you developing insight?

A practitioner enters a deepening with the stilling of the initial and sustained turning to the object of meditation
- Buddha - honorific name of Siddharta Gautama - 560 to 480 before the year zero

Copyright: https://shaolin-rainer.de
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Released:
May 9, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

The daily Chan Buddhist podcast by "Shaolin Rainer". Rainer offers guided meditations and short lectures that combine Western viewpoints with Asian spiritual practices. The focus is on the intrinsic value of mindfulness and self-compassion to reduce emotional suffering, achieve spiritual awakening and make healing possible - self-help and self-acceptance - help with anxiety/depression - strengthening self-confidence - Yoga - Meditation - Qi Gong - development of independent personality - meditative help to fall asleep -