Before we even begin to talk about meditation first we have
to figure out what exactly that means.
Meditation defined:
“The act or process of spending time in quiet thought : the
act or process of meditating “ from the online Merriam-Webster dictionary.
That’s a horrible definition.
It’s circular in the first place, defining the word with the
word by changing the ending. It’s
also entirely missing the point.
There are lots of ways to spend time in quiet thought. I can be
calculating my gross income for my 1040 tax form and be engaged in quiet
thought. That is not meditation.
So what is it?
Medtation as we think of it and as it has been studied comes
from the many and varied Eastern traditions, all the entangled branches
of Buddhism, Hinduism, Tantric practice and more. Each group has a bit of a different definition, but from my
own reading and understanding it is primarily focused on what one might
describe as mindfulness meditation.
This is commonly thought of as the “emptying of one’s mind”
enlightenment through letting go of the ego or self and the process of learning
how to live within the present moment.
This is hefty, powerful
work and I think it benefits anyone to try this sort of meditation. But I’ve come to believe that there is more to meditation
than the calming of the mind.
I’ve meditated to calm and excite my mind. I’ve meditated to heal
myself, to heal others, to connect to deity, to connect to the land, to do
magic, to prepare for an interview, to cope with grief and sorrow, and to
prepare to lead.
I would argue that meditation is more than just the stilling
of the mind. It is the basis of everything we call magic and
a lot of what we call cognitive-behavioral psychology. A common definition of magic is
changing consciousness at will. I
see meditation as the skillset that makes that change happen. Meditation practice helps build willpower, which is essential for success at any endeavor. Neuro-Linguistic Programming is an
incredibly modern viewpoint on meditation and it has some fascinating
insights. We know that the ancient
Europeans also had practices that one might call meditation, The Celtic poets
had a process to inspire poetry which involved sensory deprivation and breath
control where they went into a cave, wrapped themselves in a hide and put a
rock on their chest. They
effectively found a way to cut out sound and sight, and putting a rock on your
chest is certainly a way to make you focus on your breath. The point of the exercise was to
come out of this extended meditation with the power of inspiration in order to
write grand poetry and song.
Earth Mother Wakes |
Some might argue that this is more like a trance technique
than a meditation technique, but I would ask, what is the difference? Both are physical and psychological
adjustments to environment in order to create a certain mental and emotional
outcome. I would say
that trance techniques are simply advanced meditation techniques. If that is the case, then it makes
perfect sense why so many teachers from various magical traditions suggest that
meditation be a basis for practice.
Meditation isn’t just for Buddhists and it never was.
I would define meditation thusly:
Meditation is any of a large group of mental and physical
techniques that willfully change the state of mind of a person. This can include cognitive, emotional,
and spiritual states of mind.
That’s a pretty big category, isn’t it?
But I think it fits the evidence. I started meditating when
I was pretty young. I didn’t even know that was what I was doing. I had a babysitting gig the summer
before high school. The kids
mostly weren’t home. They went to
their friend’s houses. I was
mostly there to answer the phone and make lunch. I read and watched a lot of MTV. Finally I got so bored that I just sat.
I sat crosslegged in their living room bored out of my freaking gourd and did
nothing.
I found that nothingness was a place inside my head. It was
profound. In the moment between
one breath and the next was a vastness that expanded in every direction. It was beautiful darkness and I loved
it. I’ve followed that beautiful darkness ever since that moment. It was accidental meditation and
I fell in love with that feeling.
It fits my definition as well as being pretty close to some
of the other definitions that you can find around the internetz.
So that is what I teach, and what exercise one and two are
meant to demonstrate. The first is
a more traditional technique for calming the mind, the second is meant to bring
it up to a quicker state of mind to ready the individual for something that
engages logical thought. These
skills are incredibly useful and important. Certainly, some people will be better at it than others, but
like everyone needs to know basic math and reading, I think everyone should
know basic consciousness changing techniques, aka, meditation.
To name a thing is to begin to understand it. Language has a profound impact on culture and by choosing to understand something in a certain way it becomes that thing. I have heard it said that English doesn't have words for many spiritual concepts, but we can. Just like our ancestors did before us we can learn to integrate the new and the very old into our worldview. We have the power to better ourselves if we choose to do so. What do you choose, dear reader?
Love the "Earth Mother Wakes" painting, is it new? Certainly timely regardless. Was out hiking in the woods Sunday and that's how it felt: all promise but no breaking through just yet, just the green-green moss and the cold water from hard running springs on the hillside. Happy Eastertide!
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