INTRODUCTION
Meditation is a tool for waking up to the richness of your
life. Much of the great stuff in life is really simple.
Hidden inside your most mundane moments are pathways to
heightened and enlightened appreciation. Consider, for
example:
• Awakening from a deep sleep and lingering in that
blissful state before getting up.
• Drinking your morning tea or coffee with intense
pleasure, as if it were an elixir of life.
• Hugging someone you love with fervor, as you would after
a long separation, even if it’s only been a few hours.
• Walking and feeling the simple joy of movement as you
stride along.
• Eating a simple meal and taking great delight in each
bite.
• Being aware of all the people you love, and feeling your
heart melt into openness.
• Lying down and giving in to the heaviness of fatigue, and
relaxing so deeply that in a few minutes you are rested and
ready for action.
Such experiences are accessible to anyone, in the course of
an ordinary day. When we take an ordinary moment and pay
extraordinary attention, magic happens. It's these magical
moments that create a vibrant and meaningful life.
Although they often flash by without being appreciated,
these moment-by-moment happenings make up the texture of
our lives. If we miss too many of them because we’re
distracted, fatigued, or stressed, then later we may feel
that we have missed out on our real life.
Extraordinary attention can be cultivated. We can learn to
be open to what life is offering. When we practice giving
full attention to the motions of life, this is meditation.
In this book, we present fourteen meditations that you can
do at transitional moments throughout your day. You don’t
have to go anywhere, or change yourself at all. You can
start right here and now.
What is Meditation?
Since the dawn of time, people have experienced awakenings
in the midst of their everyday activities. Sometimes they
talked about them, or recorded in their journals, which
became sacred texts. What we now know of meditative
techniques is rooted in the sharing of knowledge about how
to cultivate the instinctive wisdom that comes from within.
You might be surprised to hear that meditation is a
built-in ability we all have. But it’s true, and you can do
it, because the capacity to meditate is right there in your
responsiveness to life. You are always breathing, for
example. If you sit down, close your eyes, and pay
attention to your breath in a restful way, you’ll be
meditating.
Life is full of tiny pleasures: the feel of the sun on your
cheeks; the sound of the wind; the color of the sky and
trees; the expressions on the faces of the people around
you; the smells of food cooking; the sensation in your
heart when you see someone you love coming toward you. If
you pause in the midst of any such experience, and give
yourself over to appreciating it fully, you are entering
the realm of meditation.
You can appreciate with any or all of your senses – touch,
hearing, vision, smell, taste, and even your sense of
balance. The more senses you use, the more sensual and
engaging meditation will feel. It’s OK to enjoy it
immensely.
Think of meditation as the practice of falling in love with
life. In love, we pay attention with heightened
appreciation. We are open to experience and our heart is
moved. Meditation is the process of intentionally
cultivating our capacity to pay attention in this exquisite
way. All the disciplines and techniques of meditation
amount to cultivating what we do naturally when we are in
love.
To practice meditation, select some quality of life you
love, and attend to it tenderly, gently, and restfully.
When you love someone or something, you want to hang out,
be with them, and give and receive appreciation. You want
to be in the flow of give and take. Meditation is the
restful, inward, accepting part of the give and take of
love. The key to meditation is that you set things up so
that you are restful. When you rest in loving
attentiveness, the vibrating silence that’s underneath
outer activity can emerge.
You can meditate on the simplest aspect of life, such as a
breath. Each breath can seem like a great gift, the
universe itself flowing into you and giving you life. When
you do this, it is as if you draw energy out of each breath
and each sensation, and any fatigue just drops away. In the
space of a few minutes you are refreshed and ready to
engage fully with life again.
Breath is, after all, one of the main ways that life is
renewed in your body, moment-to-moment. You should be
delighted that you are breathing. Spiritual people the
world over say that breath is a gift from God, an
immediate, ongoing, free gift of the Holy Spirit. Each
breath of air you take is created by the entire ecosystem
on Earth, including all the trees, plants in the oceans,
and the sun that provide the energy for photosynthesis.
Biologically speaking, breath is a gift from the whole
world, the solar system, and all of creation.
Right now, for example, start to pay attention to the
feeling of the breath flowing in through your nose, down
into your chest and belly, and then turning to flow out
again. Exhale with a quiet whoosh or soft sigh for ten or
fifteen breaths, which is about a minute. You are on your
way.