Buddhist Meditation: Meditation in BuddhismBy http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion
Buddhist Meditation: Meditation in Buddhism
Meditation
is something that plays a part in virtually all religions, although some of
them don't use the word meditation. And meditation is something that can be
done with no religious element at all.
Meditation
involves both the body and the mind. For Buddhists this is particularly
important as they want to avoid what they call "duality", and so
their way of meditating must involve the body and the mind as a single entity.
In
the most general definition, meditation is a way of taking control of the mind
so that it becomes peaceful and focused, and the meditator becomes more aware.
In
Zen Buddhism the purpose of meditation is to stop the mind rushing about in an
aimless (or even a purposeful) stream of thoughts. People often say that the
aim of meditation is "to still the mind".
Zen
Buddhism offers a number of methods of meditation to people - methods which
have been used for a long time, and which have been shown to work.
Zen
Buddhists can meditate on their own or in groups.
Meditating
in a group - perhaps at a retreat called a "sesshin" or in a
meditation room or "zendo" has the benefit of reminding a person that
they are both part of a larger Buddhist community, and part of the larger
community of beings of every species.
What
is meditation?
Meditation
is a mental and physical course of action that a person uses to separate
themselves from their thoughts and feelings in order to become fully aware.
Meditation
has no supernatural side, nor is the person meditation trying to get into a
hypnotic state, or to get in touch with angels or anything like that.
A
successful meditator is just simply being; not judging, not thinking, just
simply being aware and at peace; living each moment as it comes as fully as
possible.
Many
different courses of actions can be meditation.
Zazen
The
key Zen practice is "zazen". This involves sitting in one of several
available positions and meditating so that you become fully in touch with the
true nature of reality.
Different
schools of Zen do zazen in different ways: Soto meditators face a wall, Rinzai
meditators sit in a circle facing each other.
Posture
Meditation
is possible in any stable posture that keeps the spine fairly straight. Sitting
quietly in a chair is perfectly acceptable.
The
classic posture for Zen meditation is called the Lotus Position. This involves
sitting cross-legged with the left foot on top of the right thigh and the right
foot on top of the left thigh.
The
lotus position is difficult and uncomfortable for beginners, and there are
other sitting positions that are a lot easier to achieve, such as the half
lotus (in which only one foot is put on top of the opposite thigh) or simply
sitting cross-legged or sitting on a cushion with knees bent and lower legs
tucked under upper legs.
Methods
of meditation
Some
classic meditation methods use the meditator's own breathing. They may just sit
and concentrate on their breathingÉ not doing anything to alter the way they
breath, not worrying about whether they're doing it right or wrong, not even
thinking about breathing; just "following" the breathing and
"becoming one" with the breathing.
It's
important not to think "I am breathing" - when a person does that
they separate themselves from the breathing and start thinking of themselves as
separate from what they are doing - the aim is just to be aware of breathing.
This
is more difficult than it sounds, so some meditators prefer to count breaths,
trying to count up to ten without any distraction at all, and then starting
again at one. If they get distracted they notice the distraction and go back to
counting.
But
there are many methods of meditation - some involve chanting mantras, some
involve concentrating on a particular thing (such as a candle flame or a
flower). Nor does meditation have to involve keeping still; walking meditation
is a popular Zen way of doing it, and repetitive movements using beads or
prayer wheels are used in other faiths.
Self-discipline
Meditation teaches
self-discipline because it's boring, and because the body gets uncomfortable.
The meditator learns to keep going regardless of how bored they are, or how
much they want to scratch their nose.
Courtesy to
http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion
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