Meditation Introduction

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Meditation is the ancient art of consciously directing your attention to alter your state of consciousness. We are never limited to the direction of our attention, and are free to roam about our inner-subconscious. Some examples of possible areas of concentration could be symbols, sounds, colors, breath, uplifting thoughts, spiritual realms, etc. The backbone of meditation is your attention. Some common misconceptions of meditation are as follows:

1. Meditation is turning off all of your thoughts or completely clearing your mind.

That’s absolutely false. It is possible to come to a complete state of quietness, but mostly during meditations our minds wander. It’s perfectly normal to allow your focus to flow with your attention area.

2. Meditation is quite difficult to master, and can only be done with strict discipline.

This is another fallacy. Meditation is actually very simple when just starting out. A disciplined mind is a strong ally, but the essentials lie in merely quieting your mind and allowing your attention to come to one specific thing. Allow your mind to flow from that point.

What is our purpose for meditating?

Meditation is the traditional method for spiritual growth and development. It allows us to become more conscious of ourselves, our environment, and the universal energy surrounding us. Through meditation we access many objective areas, such as: healing, emotional cleansing and balancing, deepening concentration and insight, manifesting change, developing intuition, unlocking creativity, finding inner guidance, and exploring higher realities.

What is meditation?

In the West, the word meditation means a concentrated state of mind in serious reflection. The Latin root of the word meditation, mederi, means "to heal." It is an effort to heal afflictions of the mind, the hurt ego, by trying to understand the cause of the problem and finding a way to solve it, that is, by knowing what counter-measures to take. To meditate thus, is to deepen a state of understanding.

In the East, however, meditation does not mean thinking at all but fixing the mind in a spiritual ideal, to be one with it, or the thought-process dissolving in the consciousness of it. According to Zen, meditation does not involve any concept but is an awareness of inner silence. As per the Yoga of Patanjali, meditation is a combination of three steps: pratyahara or abstraction, or withdrawal of the mind from the sense-objects or attention to their memory; dharana or concentration; and dhyana or contemplation which, however, is not a thought-process but an absorption of the feeling of oneness with the ideal.

Awareness of an inner silence is not something easy to achieve. It can be confused with a state of dullness or being soporific, which is not the purpose of meditation. To meditate mean does not mean to have a good rest while sitting pretty, and silence is not productive without spiritual aspiration. On the other hand, few have the capacity to think clearly, and too much of mental exercise could lead to tension and confusion.

In Bhakti Yoga, meditation is visualization of the image of a chosen deity, together with mental repetition of a relevant mantra. For the Vedantin it is to contemplate on the meaning of selected verses from the Upanishads or similar scriptures. For the Catholics, it is saying the rosary, based on mantras like "Our Father which art in Heaven," or "Hail Mary, full of grace." For them meditation also consists in feeling close to Jesus after receiving communion and retiring into a quiet place.

St. Albert the Great, the teacher of St. Thomas Aquinas, observed that meditation for philosophers is a process of perfecting a thought, and for the devotees of their love of God. Prayers said in silence as a dedication of oneself to God can also be called meditation, because it means turning the mind inward to one's spiritual source, leading to peace.

For, the Hindus, repetition of a mantra, with or without a rosary, but with a feeling of spiritual oneness, is meditation. A common Buddhist meditation consists in repeating the mantras: Buddham sharanam gachchhami, sangham sharanam gachchami (I proceed remembering the Buddha, the righteous path and the welfare of my community). The Tibetians base their meditation on the mantra Om mani padme hum (I am Om, the jewel in the lotus of my heart).

For Muslims, meditation is called dhikr or repetition of selected names of God from the Quran, generally with a rosary. Feeling the breath, which is a technique in pratyahara, is an exercise in Zen meditation (the word Zen is derived from dhyana or meditation), as also counting from 1 to 20 or more, over and over again.

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