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This isn’t quite the right place for this question so if someone could point me to the correct thread...
Suddenly I’m having the worst time with keeping my eyes open during Zazen. I would definitely get bonked with the stick... my eye lids become lead and I have to close them. Then I am spending too much time fussing with myself to try to keep them open that I’m not really feeling like I’m zazening correctly. I’ve tried different times of day and nothing is making an impact. Perhaps I just need to rest more in my life in general. I’m starting a new business and have been working intensively. Thank you
Sara
ST
This isn’t quite the right place for this question so if someone could point me to the correct thread...
Suddenly I’m having the worst time with keeping my eyes open during Zazen. I would definitely get bonked with the stick... my eye lids become lead and I have to close them. Then I am spending too much time fussing with myself to try to keep them open that I’m not really feeling like I’m zazening correctly. I’ve tried different times of day and nothing is making an impact. Perhaps I just need to rest more in my life in general. I’m starting a new business and have been working intensively. Thank you
Sara
ST
You are probably just sleepy. It is important to get enough sleep, not only for Zazen. This is also why Zen folks through the centuries love their tea!
We have had a few threads with some tips, and maybe something can help:
The great teacher "Homeless Kodo" Sawaki Roshi said about sleep and Zazen ...
Eat in order to do zazen, sleep in order to do zazen. This means that eating and sleeping are also part of zazen.
In other words, we must be properly fed and rested (not too much, not too little ... ours is the Middle Way) in order to
Do any of you do zazen if you haven't slept well? I'm sometimes told that it's not ideal to do zazen if you're most likely going to fall asleep. However I have had insomnia all my life, and if I followed that advice then I'd hardly ever do zazen. I feel a need to do it even though I know I'm going to fall asleep. This is partly
Hello everyone, I hope you are doing well. I just wanted to ask you about grogginess in zazen. I take anti depression tablets which have a mild sedative effect and more often than not I will start to drift off during zazen. I've tried opening my eyes wider but the more I try and force myself to stay awake the more my body will
In the really dozing off case, walk some Kinhin instead of sitting when getting very tired.
Sara, while I've only been sitting zazen for just under a year the game changer for me was in the breathing. I noticed that the times I either dozed off or nearly dozed off my breathing had become relaxed and shallow. When I do the deeper yogic breathing from the diaphragm I tend to stay more alert. When I first started sitting a teacher suggested that when I needed to 'reset' I should focus on my breath, get back on track with the yogic breaths counting each exhale. I was told that I should never get to 10 and that if I did it meant I was focusing on my breathing instead of just sitting. To date I've only ever gotten to 4 before I had essentially reset. I also find that not being completely comfortable also helps.
Not sure if this is helpful or even sound advice tbh but hey...
Gassho
Anna
Sara, while I've only been sitting zazen for just under a year the game changer for me was in the breathing. I noticed that the times I either dozed off or nearly dozed off my breathing had become relaxed and shallow. When I do the deeper yogic breathing from the diaphragm I tend to stay more alert. When I first started sitting a teacher suggested that when I needed to 'reset' I should focus on my breath, get back on track with the yogic breaths counting each exhale. I was told that I should never get to 10 and that if I did it meant I was focusing on my breathing instead of just sitting. To date I've only ever gotten to 4 before I had essentially reset. I also find that not being completely comfortable also helps.
Not sure if this is helpful or even sound advice tbh but hey...
Gassho
Anna
Sat today/lent a hand
Anna, this is great advice. I was trying to go back to my breath and count but still taking shallow breaths. Deeper sounds better.
Thank you,
-Sara
ST
Anna, this is great advice. I was trying to go back to my breath and count but still taking shallow breaths. Deeper sounds better.
Thank you,
-Sara
ST
Yes, breathe from the diaphram or, as we say traditionally, the Hara (the area just below the navel) as if the breath was actually originating from there.
Also, stretch the neck straighter and lengthen the spine a bit (i.e, don't slouch).
Also, it may sound like blasphemy to the "Zazen is about time quantity" crowd, but if you are really tired on a certain day, do not forget that Zazen is not about "long or short." A short sitting is fine, even for some moments, if you forget all about measures of time. Get some rest! I talk about that here ...
Folks often ask about how long, and how often, to sit.
What I am about to say may be controversial among some 'Zennies', seen as too "lightweight" by many ... easily misjudged and misunderstood as "breaking the rules" or "not sufficiently serious".
But our way is "goalless, non
So many Zen students think that the longer they sit the better. They believe 10 years surpasses 10 months or 10 days, which must be better than 10 hours, which is better than 10 minutes or seconds. They treat Zazen like a taxi meter or points to rack up, the more they sit the closer they are to the goal. They equate more and
Thank you Jundo.
I didn't know about the Hara. And yes, time is interesting in regard to sitting.
I used to metaphorically beat myself up for not being able to sit for extended periods of time. It's only been very recently that I can say to myself that it's ok that I didn't sit for a certain amount of time. It also helped that with the meditation timer I use I use 3 bells to begin and set a finish bell for some ridiculous amount of time later. That way the pressure of achieving a certain goal is gone. If i sit for 40 minutes, great. If i sit for 10 minutes, just as great.
Thanks again Jundo.
Gassho
Anna
Thank you, Jundo, for this lesson.
Sara, some months ago Jundo recommended me to drink some tea before zazen. I made this into a daily habit, although some days I drink coffee instead. Perhaps it can also help you.
Gassho,
Mateus
Sat today/LAH
怠努 (Tai Do) - Lazy Effort
(also known as Mateus )
禅戒一如 (Zen Kai Ichi Nyo) - Zazen and the Precepts are One!
Thank you, Jundo, for this lesson.
Sara, some months ago Jundo recommended me to drink some tea before zazen. I made this into a daily habit, although some days I drink coffee instead. Perhaps it can also help you.
Gassho,
Mateus
Sat today/LAH
But then when you get older and drink tea before Zazen, you are awake but then need to run to the bathroom! Oh, ya can't win!
But, when sitting just sitting, when walking Kinhin just walk, when running to the bathroom ... just run!
Yes, breathe from the diaphram or, as we say traditionally, the Hara (the area just below the navel) as if the breath was actually originating from there.
Also, stretch the neck straighter and lengthen the spine a bit (i.e, don't slouch).
Also, it may sound like blasphemy to the "Zazen is about time quantity" crowd, but if you are really tired on a certain day, do not forget that Zazen is not about "long or short." A short sitting is fine, even for some moments, if you forget all about measures of time. Get some rest! I talk about that here ...
Folks often ask about how long, and how often, to sit.
What I am about to say may be controversial among some 'Zennies', seen as too "lightweight" by many ... easily misjudged and misunderstood as "breaking the rules" or "not sufficiently serious".
But our way is "goalless, non
So many Zen students think that the longer they sit the better. They believe 10 years surpasses 10 months or 10 days, which must be better than 10 hours, which is better than 10 minutes or seconds. They treat Zazen like a taxi meter or points to rack up, the more they sit the closer they are to the goal. They equate more and
Gassho, J
STLah
Yes, I learned a while ago that I'm usually unable to do longer zazen with chronic illness (the deep pain and lingering side effects aren't worth the struggle).
However, it was Jundo's suggestion to do shorter zazen and to try a few short sessions a day, which is how I evolved into mini-sessions and was able to develop a regular daily practice. It works for me.
Gassho2
Kim
St lh
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鏡道 | Kyodo (Meian) | "Mirror of the Way" visiting Unsui Nothing I say is a teaching, it's just my own opinion.
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