Dear all
This week’s reading consists of pages 193-200 (from REGULARITY OF PRACTICE to the end of chapter).
In this section Darlene talks about having a regular sitting practice, and noting that she finds it best when she sits five or six days of the week. She also points out that sometimes we think that we do not have time to sit but can watch our breath when in an elevator or taxi, or do walking meditation while waiting for the coffee to brew or pasta to cook.
Darlene goes on to speak about experiencing physical pain during practice, and two ways of working with this – using your breath to expand the spaces in your body and adjusting your position to ease the pain. She notes that discomfort is different to pain in that discomfort passes, whereas pain often becomes more insistent.
This section next talks about the balance between stability and vulnerability in sitting practice, working with sufficient stability to be able to maintain a stable posture and consistent awareness, and enough vulnerability to become open and receptive. Becoming either too solid and stable or too vulnerable takes us to undesirable extremes. As the Buddha took the lute player Sona – sitting is like tuning a lute string, not too tight, not too loose. Darlene characterises stability like being a mountain, whereas vulnerability is like the surface of a lake.
My last Tibetan Buddhist teacher used to say:
Body like a mountain
Breath like the sea
Mind like the sky
Darlene talks about meditation being a place where we can allow the tender places of our body and mind to unfurl and be seen, a time of the day when we can let our vulnerabilities show themselves. The breath can be an anchor through this process.
She urges patience with our practice. It changes us, and allows us to be changed, but forcing change is not helpful.
Question prompts
1. What is your experience with pain and discomfort during sitting practice? Can you differentiate between the two and do you respond differently?
2. Do you resonate with the notion that sitting practice gives us a space to be vulnerable and look ‘under the skin’ of what is going on with our bodies and minds? Is that something you welcome or can it be a little scary at times to face what is there?
Wishing you all a healthful week.
Gassho
Kokuu
This week’s reading consists of pages 193-200 (from REGULARITY OF PRACTICE to the end of chapter).
In this section Darlene talks about having a regular sitting practice, and noting that she finds it best when she sits five or six days of the week. She also points out that sometimes we think that we do not have time to sit but can watch our breath when in an elevator or taxi, or do walking meditation while waiting for the coffee to brew or pasta to cook.
Darlene goes on to speak about experiencing physical pain during practice, and two ways of working with this – using your breath to expand the spaces in your body and adjusting your position to ease the pain. She notes that discomfort is different to pain in that discomfort passes, whereas pain often becomes more insistent.
This section next talks about the balance between stability and vulnerability in sitting practice, working with sufficient stability to be able to maintain a stable posture and consistent awareness, and enough vulnerability to become open and receptive. Becoming either too solid and stable or too vulnerable takes us to undesirable extremes. As the Buddha took the lute player Sona – sitting is like tuning a lute string, not too tight, not too loose. Darlene characterises stability like being a mountain, whereas vulnerability is like the surface of a lake.
My last Tibetan Buddhist teacher used to say:
Body like a mountain
Breath like the sea
Mind like the sky
Darlene talks about meditation being a place where we can allow the tender places of our body and mind to unfurl and be seen, a time of the day when we can let our vulnerabilities show themselves. The breath can be an anchor through this process.
She urges patience with our practice. It changes us, and allows us to be changed, but forcing change is not helpful.
Question prompts
1. What is your experience with pain and discomfort during sitting practice? Can you differentiate between the two and do you respond differently?
2. Do you resonate with the notion that sitting practice gives us a space to be vulnerable and look ‘under the skin’ of what is going on with our bodies and minds? Is that something you welcome or can it be a little scary at times to face what is there?
Wishing you all a healthful week.
Gassho
Kokuu
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