This Sunday please join us for an Introductory Mindfulness Retreat at High Park in Toronto! Click on the link to... http://t.co/5vPclwao
254 days ago
@ContikiB is this short for Contiki Buddha? At first the Buddha is behind you, then in front.. then becomes you.. the perfect self realized
262 days ago
Have good trust in yourself -- not in the One that you think you should be, but in the One that you are
- Maezumi Roshi
262 days ago
RT @cinderland: Success is not the key to happiness. Happiness is the key to success. If you love what you are doing, you will be succes ...
270 days ago
Harvard Business School coming out with another great insight into Employee Engagement and how it impacts our bottom l…http://t.co/pPTBxHp
270 days ago
Good posture and consistency are the most important elements for a successful personal practice – dedicate a time and a space where you can practice everyday (even right when you wake up in bed with your pillow as a cushion if your life schedule is fast paced), with early mornings being best.
When you allow yourself time to enter a meditative state, you enhance the sleep that you just had – Zen Meditation brings you to a state of the deepest relaxation you attain while sleeping in a dreamless state (deepest REM sleep possible) – think of it like adding an extra hour of sleep by taking 15-20 minutes of silent sitting. Also you can visualize your perfect day which enhances the ability to achieve the accolade you wish to achieve.
Studies have just been released these past few months that Zen Meditation increases Grey Matter in your brain (your brain grows) just after 11 hours of cumulative practice. Also just after 8 hours of practice (spread over a few months) you achieve psychological benefits of a more positive outlook on life minimizing our self-defeating inner monologue – it also treats chronic pain as good as medication in recent studies.
There is nothing mythical about the meditative state, it’s simply a relaxed state of awareness where you don’t judge your thoughts – your body mind simply relax deeply allowing yourself to listen to your senses.
This state heightens your Self-Awareness as described by Harvard Universities Daniel Golemen – and the meditative state is carried throughout your day through regular practice – heightening your senses, memory, and connection to yourself and those around you.
Once seated, roll your hips slightly forward, allowing your belly to relax and your breath to move freely.
Center your spine by gently swaying from left to right in decreasing arcs.
Push the crown of your head toward the ceiling, straightening and extending your spine. Then relax your shoulders.
Your head should not tilt forward or backward or lean to the side. Ears over your shoulders, nose in line with the navel.
Eyes are lowered at a 45-degree angle, looking about three feet in front of you without focusing the gaze. If there is a wall there, look as if you were seeing through the wall.
Lips and teeth should be gently closed, tip of tongue against roof of your mouth behind the front teeth. Swallow and suck the saliva from your mouth, creating a vacuum.
Place your hands in the “cosmic mudra (position)”, left hand on top of the right, palms up, tips of the thumbs lightly touching, forming a wide oval. Hands should rest on lap, thighs, or lower abdomen, where they do not create a stress on your arms.
The whole point is to find an alert, energetic posture that will allow you to sit very still. Check yourself each time you sit, forming the habit of careful attentiveness to your body posture before practice.
Breathe in through the nose, letting the air fill your lower abdomen as if it were a balloon, then gently release with a slow, deep out-breath … in and out, in and out.
Count one on the in-breath, two on the out-breath, three on the in-breath, four on the out-breath, and so on, up to ten. Then begin at one again. If it is more comfortable for you, you may count the out-breaths only and follow the in-breath without counting. If a thought causes you to stray from the counting, just notice that, return your focus to the breath, and begin the count again starting at one.
Although written meditation instructions can get you off to a good start, it is helpful to receive personal guidance from an experienced instructor. Above all, enjoy the experience.
Good posture and consistency are the most important elements for a successful personal practice – dedicate a time and a space where you can practice everyday (even right when you wake up in bed with your pillow as a cushion if your life schedule is fast paced), with early mornings being best.
Studies have just been released these past few months that Zen Meditation increases Grey Matter in your brain (your brain grows) just after 11 hours of cumulative practice. Also just after 8 hours of practice (spread over a few months) you achieve psychological benefits of a more positive outlook on life minimizing our self-defeating inner monologue – it also treats chronic pain as good as medication in recent studies.
There is nothing mythical about the meditative state, it’s simply a relaxed state of awareness where you don’t judge your thoughts – your body mind simply relax deeply allowing yourself to listen to your senses.
This state heightens your Self-Awareness as described by Harvard Universities Daniel Golemen – and the meditative state is carried throughout your day through regular practice – heightening your senses, memory, and connection to yourself and those around you.
Although written meditation instructions can get you off to a good start, it is helpful to receive personal guidance from an experienced instructor. Above all, enjoy the experience.
Related content: