I love helping people out in the beginning stages of their meditation
practice by providing them with tips and tricks that I have found work well for
me and have made my meditation easy and effective.
Thinking back to when I was Growing up, I was always a social kid –
but I also remember, that ever since I was quite young, I always relished the
thought of taking time alone for some me-time.
Even if it was just for a brief interval, I valued that special solace
of not having to listen, speak to or participate with - anyone but me. As a kid I was never bored or never lonely.
One of my early "outer world silencing" discoveries was when I was
swimming in a pool with a bunch of other noisy kids. While all of them were jumping and
splashing and laughing, I would breath in a deep breath, dunk myself under the
water and self-create my own little sacred world of “noiselessness”.
I just loved this feeling! I would pop my head back up for air and then go
back down below the surface. I would do it dozens of times, each time being amazed at how I
could instantaneously go from a world of chaos to my special quiet place with
such a natural ease.
Today in my meditation practice, I still use this same technique as
a visualization technique to quiet my mind from thoughts and distractions.
Here is how I make the "Swimmers Silence” work for me now:
I imagine myself in a beautiful flowing stream listening to all of
nature’s sounds from the birds and bugs to the whistling wind, to the water
rushing over the rocks.
I slowly dip down below the surface and beneath the current to
comfortably rest in the soft powdery sand.
I can feel the weight of the water
slowing down my movements as I slowly wave my arms into hands together-prayer
position.
Being that this is my imagination, I am of course able to now
somehow breathe under water as well, and it is beautiful and it is peaceful and
silent.
All of my worries go away and
my body, mind and spirit are now relaxed for meditation.
Whenever a thought or distraction enters my mind, I simply and
effortlessly direct it above my head and into the flowing current of the stream
as I blissfully watch that thought meander downstream. Poof! It's gone! Then I softly go back to my meditation.
Every Mindful Meditation approach, no matter what its origin must
deal with quieting the inevitable thoughts that will wiggle their way into the conscious
mind during meditation.
My under water technique works really well for me.
I hope my meditation approach inspires you to find your path
and to discover
your own True Nature.
Just be you,
-Chris
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