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Thanks for bumping this thread. I was reminded how instrumental my meditation practice has been in dealing with my (now almost non-existent!) social anxiety. I didn't start meditation as an antidote to anxiety--it was a very nice side-effect though
Thank you for the brave sharing and the wise responses. I only have one brief thing to add.
Often times I've found that realizing that actually you are the one in charge of your own perceptions and how you respond to stimuli makes it easier though not easy to shut them down or lessen the effect they have. Your inner workings mean more to the overall experience than you would ordinarily think. Some some problems are even 100% generated by yourself. When you sit then gradually the slate is wiped clean(er). Your vision is no longer as obscured as before. You come to a place where you when rising from the sit can act from that clearer field and hence live your life in a at once gentler and more decisive manner.
Anxiety and panic come to us all at some point. I had panic attacks for years and was on meds for them. Panicking about panic is the main cause of agoraphobia actually.
While in panic mode, a psych would tell us to focus on our bodies. To feel our heart racing, rapid breathing and tense muscles. Then we start to breathe slow and deep, relax our muscles and feel our heart beat slow. Mind and body are one, so when the body calms the mind calms. Sounds rather Zenny for CB therapists doesn't it?
Anyway, for me just sitting is but an extension of "just this" if that makes any sense haha. Sitting kinda spills over into other aspects of life. Because zazen is always, even if we aren't aware of it.
Since I last posted in this thread, I very rarely experience panic attacks anymore. I still have anxiety which causes OCD like symptoms, but that's manageable. I feel like the only thing that got it to stop was just getting used to it. No meds, though I considered it. What's odd now is I am in control of it. I could very easily summon up an attack at will, and therefore just learned to ignore it if I could just make it happen. Hard to explain.... Maybe it helps someone to know that, though.
Gassho
Sat today
求道芸化 Kyūdō Geika
I am just a priest-in-training, please do not take anything I say as a teaching.
Thank you all -- wild timing. I experienced some mild anxiety during today's sitting, and I was going to post it, and here you go -- perhaps something in the Treeleaf water. lol
I do not have any clinical level of anxiety that requires meds or anything, but I will tell you my anxiety has a lot to do with ego protection. If work is slow, oh no -- I'm not important, will I get laid off? Will I starve and lose everything? Will my wife leave me? What if I can't solve that programming problem or don't know everything that people think I should? The list goes on.
I may have always had these feelings; I first started actually noticing them after a few months of sitting when I was taking Jukai. I will tell you; I almost lost it, then something switched and I started laughing.
Sitting through these feelings can be hard, but for me it's of the utmost necessity; this is part of learning myself too, even the dark side that scares the hell out of me.
I have found that just sitting has allowed me to practice letting go of whatever fears pop up in the course of the day. My thought runs, no separation - is there fear in my seat, is there fear in my feet, my legs, my hands...no. Fear is in my mind, and my mind can't run away. My mind is here/now and in these infinite moments fear has no room to be. So, back to the breath, and there is no fear in my breath, I take no fear in, and it goes with each exhalation. It's a surrender as someone said above, not in the sense of being trapped and helpless, but just letting what comes come and it will go. I too am on multiple medications (for bipolar disorder and anxiety, less the anxiety now!) but I consider those now part of practice, in the sense of maintaining health. Today I did walking meditation and truly felt the 'massaging the earth' with each step, no fear arose. In my sitting meditation today the flow made no room for the usual anxiety - the coming and going did not allow anything to settle. It was as if a cool stream was flowing, washing any stray thoughts away. Perhaps this is not the ideal of 'empty mind' but it felt lovely.
ETA: Another old post! I will find my way to the present...just more newb wanderings.
... My thought runs, no separation - is there fear in my seat, is there fear in my feet, my legs, my hands...no. Fear is in my mind, and my mind can't run away. My mind is here/now and in these infinite moments fear has no room to be. So, back to the breath, and there is no fear in my breath, I take no fear in, and it goes with each exhalation. It's a surrender as someone said above, not in the sense of being trapped and helpless, but just letting what comes come and it will go. ..
Hi Julie,
this is awesome, thanks for posting! It may not be strictly Shikantaza, but it sounds like a wonderful way to just be with anxiety, and find a calm oasis.
Gassho
Lisa
sat today
展道 渺寛 Tendō Byōkan
Please take my words with a big grain of salt. I know nothing. Wisdom is only found in our whole-hearted practice together.
Hey Greg,
I still do get them time to time, best thing for them is to look right at em
This is my approach too. I don't get very deep fear but rather gnawing apprehension. I have found by by seeking out issues that are causing stress/mental pain and going right into the actual emotion they create they are most often dissolved. The seeking out is not about trying to understand but rather the process of triggering or identifying the emotion. They - or something similar - will return, so I usually sit every day. Its all mind
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