One of the practices I'm trying to make more into a habit is saying some sort of meal gatha before I eat as well as a daily metta practice. But I often find I struggle to either remember the meal gatha, or in the case of the metta chant, I have trouble bringing myself to actually feel loving kindness when saying it. That's not to say that that I'm feeling negative thoughts/emotions either, just that I feel like I'm just saying words without much meaning behind them.
I suppose in regards to the meal gatha, perhaps a first step would be to try and work towards slowing myself down enough to just eat the food without feeling like I need to be watching/doing something else while I eat. As for the metta practice, is this one of those "fake it till you make it" moments?
Slightly longer than 3 sentences, apologies

Evan,
Sat today/LAH
I suppose in regards to the meal gatha, perhaps a first step would be to try and work towards slowing myself down enough to just eat the food without feeling like I need to be watching/doing something else while I eat. As for the metta practice, is this one of those "fake it till you make it" moments?
Slightly longer than 3 sentences, apologies

Evan,
Sat today/LAH
) practice in which, like an actor on stage at first if need be, one actually summons the feeling from within somewhere, for a memory perhaps, until the "role" assumed is embodied and becomes how one really feels. Many Buddhist practice, especially many of the meditations which the Tibetans and South Asians use, are visualization and embodiment practices in some way (e.g., the Tibetans often summon to mind the image of a Buddha or Bodhisattva, and their qualities, so that one might actually embody those qualities).
At first I had to write it down for reference, but then after you do it for a while you just remember it (like the Heart Sutra - although I do not remember it in Japanese. hahaha). I feel like I may need to add a coffee gatha, as I'm probably more attached to that than food. 


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