In recent decades, our western consumer society, both here in North America and in Europe, has wholeheartedly embraced the East Asian core practices of meditation and mindfulness, but as with all such cultural borrowings, we have dramatically simplified and commercialized these practices, turning them into commodities for consumption in popular magazines, self-help books, TV programs, psychotherapy clinics, and even sessions at corporate conferences or stress reduction sessions for workers in the Pentagon! In the process, we have often stripped these practices of the richness of their original cultural contexts—and in the process, bastardized them.
In part,
this is an entirely normal process; as it was with Christianity or Islam, Hindu
and (primarily) Buddhist spiritual traditions have adapted themselves to the
pre-existent sensibilities of other cultures as they have spread out from their
cultures of origin, often losing much in the translation, but sometimes gaining
in clarity and simplicity as they shed their original cultural trappings and constraints
as well. Very few American Buddhists,
for example, practice with the rigorous discipline of Japanese Zen monks, the asceticism
of Southeast Asian traditions, or the philosophical subtlety and ritual
complexity of Indo-Tibetan traditions.
At their
best, such simplifications (as with Thich Nhat Hanh’s stripped-down Buddhism or
the Dalai Lama’s charismatic wisdom, simplicity, and humor) have inspired
widespread adoption of very useful, effective methods for realizing the
benefits of meditative practices, cultivating inner equanimity, and becoming
more compassionate, and more actively and effectively involved in healing our
social and ecological pathologies throughout the world.
But the widespread
commercialization of “mindfulness” and “meditation” has also led, quite
frequently, to narcissistic, self-serving attitudes like those found on the “Insight
Timer” app (which opens with the query “How are you feeling today?” and
features innumerable sappy recordings to play while cultivating self-absorption).
This attitude has led to some ludicrous extremes, like one ad from an
investment firm promoting “mindful money management” so that participants can
get even richer, more quickly, with calm and deep concentration on their
portfolios.
What is
missing here? One word: Ethics. Every
authentic spiritual tradition on the planet, whether Indigenous; Western-Abrahamic
(Judaism, Christianity, Islam—and their offshoots); or Eastern-Dharmic (Hindu,
Buddhism, Taoism—and their offshoots) has had ethics at its core, rooted in the
recognition that, as Martin Luther King, Jr. memorably put it, “We are caught
in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny.
Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.” Or as the Buddhists put it, “This is because
that is.” You will not find a single (authentic) religious sage, in any
tradition on the planet, who would disagree with this basic insight, from which
all ethical responsibility arises. This “inescapable network of mutuality” is, indeed,
inescapable. It is our own living planet, and beyond that, the universe.
Hence another
beautiful articulation of this core Dharmic insight: “Everything that lives is
Holy” (William Blake).
So what does
this have to do with mindfulness or meditation?
Simply this: Unless meditation is grounded in this fundamental awareness
of the “inescapable network of mutuality,” it is just self-indulgence, no more “spiritual”
than a prize fighter taking three deep breaths between rounds. It helps him—but
nobody else.
So what
exactly is meditation? There are, of course, many definitions, and to a
considerable extent, those who practice meditation need to discover, for
themselves, what it is—through their own practice, whether alone or under the
guidance of a teacher or mentor. So here
is my own definition, which you can take or leave as you will: Meditation is breathing, observing, and
letting go. Again and again.
Let’s unpack
these.
BREATHE: Whenever we talk of “spiritual” traditions
or “spirituality,” the question arises (whether we visit this question or not),
“What do we mean by ‘spirit?’” For many,
especially modern Christians, “spirit” refers to something nebulous and
supernatural, the “Holy Ghost” that is somehow connected in the Trinity with
God the Father and with Jesus the Son. Hence it is, for many, something they “believe
in” just as they have been taught all their lives to believe in God and in Jesus
as the Son of God. But in fact, “spirit”
is rooted in the Latin verb “spiro, spirare” which means “to breathe.” Not
surprisingly, the same exact equivalence of “spirit” and “breath” can be found
in other languages and religious cultures as well: “ruach” in Hebrew, “pneuma”
in Greek, “prana” in Sanskrit, “chi” in Chinese, “ki” in Japanese—and so on. So
we can safely say that spirit = breath.
But breath
is not a thing; it is a process. From a biophysical perspective, the free oxygen
we breathe is a transform of solar energy, released from plants as an
energy-rich waste product of photosynthesis, and inhaled into our lungs to power
our metabolism. And the Carbon Dioxide we exhale is essential plant food,
enabling them, through photosynthesis, to manufacture simple sugars (C6-H12-O6)
that serve as storage batteries for the energy they need to grow from seed to
flower and fruit. Thus, our breathing in
and out is deeply connected with the breathing out and in of plants, another
instance of that “inescapable network of mutuality” that entwines us all…
So breath is
spirit because it connects us, literally, with everyone and everything else. If
we breathe in that spirit (if you will pardon the word play), we are meditating.
If not, we are simply doing what someone else told us to do, without knowing
why.
OBSERVE: One immediate benefit of simply following
your breath with your awareness—the core instruction of meditation—is that you
stop thinking about anything else, if only for that moment. And this enables
you to observe—to look deeply, first at your own breath, in and out;
then at the body which is doing the breathing; then at whatever physical and
emotional sensations are playing in and around your body and mind; then (with
more practice) at your own mental processes, and finally, at your inner narrative—the
things you are thinking about, dreaming about, fantasizing about, or fretting
about. Simply stepping back, as it were, and observing these things from a
place of calm induced by slow and steady breathing means that you are no longer
obsessed with them, whether it is a pain in your left leg, a disturbing memory,
a flare-up of anger with your spouse or children, or a craving for chocolate.
Observing them detaches you from them; you learn to simply acknowledge their
presence, with compassion for yourself and others—and with practice, even for those
who may have triggered the anger, desire, or obsessive thoughts and feelings.
LET GO: Just as attentive breathing is a prerequisite
to observing yourself and others with insight and compassion, observing, in
turn, is a prerequisite to letting go. You know you have let go, as Thich Nhat
Hanh points out, when you can gently smile at your own passing thoughts and
obsessions. Putting it simply, we
breathe in order to observe, observe in order to let go, and let go in order to
breathe.
It takes a lot of regular practice—you will not “get it” right
away. All of us—even experienced meditators—get distracted, all the time. But
rather than beating yourself up for getting distracted yet again, the key—once again—is
compassion, first toward yourself and then toward others—especially those who
may have triggered you with obsessive feelings of anger, rage, or even the converse,
like lust.
And then—once you have forgiven yourself for getting
distracted (and other people, memories, or things for having distracted you)—simply
go back to your breath and start again.
Here is a simple mantra you can use as “training wheels” for
meditation: BREATHING, OBSERVING, LETTING GO, ABIDING. I did
not bother expanding on “Abiding” because it is not a practice in itself—it is
the goal of practice. We BREATHE with
gratitude and benevolence; we OBSERVE with insight and compassion; we LET GO
with joy and relief, and at that moment, we are ABIDING in equanimity and
peace. Repeat as often as necessary.
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