In an all too often shared and touted article on the effects on meditation and the gut microbiome in Tibetan monks vs others living near them. https://www.usnews.com/news/health-news/articles/2023-01-17/in-tibetan-monk-study-hints-that-meditating-can-alter-gut-microbes#:~:text=Tibetan%20Buddhist%20monks%20appear%20to,according%20to%20the%20study%20authors. We can easily see it as a real 'win' for those practicing meditation but...
On the Buddhist journey, it is best to take the centered path. Meditation, mindfulness and practice of the Dharma. Study and learn together and expand our consciousness, compassion and wisdom.
Saturday, February 18, 2023
Meditation and the gut microbiome, My gut feeling...
Wednesday, July 13, 2022
Compassion fatigue
I have been teaching meditation and mindfulness for over 15 years. I have taught to police officers, nurses, medics and regular working folk. I now teach at a psychiatric treatment center that focuses on military, first responders, drug recovery and acute psychiatric care of children and adults. One of the main guided meditations I do is the Metta Bhavana or Loving Kindness meditation.
Compassion is a difficult term to really put into words that translate into our daily routines. For some of us in the healthcare field it is a daily and moment by moment practice we all are in the middle of, even when patients and clients are being difficult. We have to remember that they are being that way BECAUSE of their suffering and not just to be mean to us.
There is a term in animal care called 'fear aggression' it is when an animal is cornered or feels threatened that it can attack us. This is why we see professional animal handlers often down at the level of the animal or even below them. This makes them a little more receptive and comfortable. It is that way with people too. Too often healthcare workers find themselves at the brunt end of insults, harassments and even physical violence from people they are caring for.
As healthcare workers we often have to remind ourselves and others to 'be compassionate'.
Practicing compassion and loving kindness are often seen as core practices in Buddhism. At least in the form(s) of Buddhism I have studied; Theravada, Mahayana, Chan, and Vajrayana. There is great variation in how practice is done in all forms of Buddhism with some even evolving today both in the East and the West. However I feel that this practice is a good foundation no matter how you are practicing Buddhism.
In our general practices we may not visit loving kindness or compassion too often. It is commonly a 'feel good' meditation that is not as mainstream as Samatha, Vipassana, Breath observation, mindful abiding, etc. We may contemplate certain aspects of the teachings, read then meditate etc. Many times I have had people report and I often see in online conversations that people want to meditate to relieve stress, they meditate when stressful events occur, or they feel some upset over some event, presentation, conversation or thought.
I see many also complain about the injustices in the world and the need for action. This is a passionate conversation but not really compassionate. When studying the Metta Bhavana and Sutra, we include ourselves, our most loved beings, our friends, family, neutral people and even those we disagree with. Not to convince them, nor to somehow morally 'one up' them or try to change them via thought, we offer them this loving kindness without expectation of anything. Without the 'need' to do it, or even the want for them to be any other way than free from suffering, worry, affliction and to be happy. Here is the readings I have done for many years on loving kindness.
The teaching on Loving Kindness (Metta Sutta)
Thus I have heard..
One skilled in good, wishing to attain peace should act thus:
One should be able, straight, upright, obedient, gentle, and humble.
One should be content, easy to support, with few duties, living lightly, controlled in senses, discreet, not impudent, balanced about family.
One should not do any slight wrong for which the wise might censure one.
May all beings be happy and secure! May all beings have happy minds!
Whatever living beings there may be without exception, weak or strong, tall, large, middling, short, subtle, or gross, visible, or invisible, near or far, born or coming to birth, May all beings have happy minds!
Let no one deceive another nor despise anyone anywhere.
Neither in anger nor enmity should anyone wish to harm another.
As a mother would risk her own life to protect her only child, even so towards all living beings one should cultivate a boundless heart.
One should cultivate, for all the world...
a heart of loving kindness above, below, and all around, unobstructed, without hate or enmity.
Monk/Minister: “Sadhu” Congregation: “Sadhu, Sadhu, Sadhu”
Begin sitting meditation…
Meditation on loving kindness (Metta Bhavana)
Having seen that all beings have a desire for happiness,
One should mindfully develop loving kindness towards all beings.
May I be happy and free from suffering,
and always like myself may my friends, neutral persons, and the hostile be happy too.
May all beings in this village, in this state, in other countries, in our galaxy be ever happy.
May all persons, individuals, beings, creatures in all the galaxies be ever happy.
So too may all women, men, noble ones, non-noble ones, gods,
humans, and beings in the lower worlds be happy.
May all beings throughout the universe be happy.
May I be free from hatred, may I be free from affliction, may I be free from worry, may I live happily.
As I am so also may my parents, teachers, preceptors, friendly,
indifferent and hostile beings be free from hatred.
May they be free from affliction, may they be free from worry, may they live happily,
may they be released from suffering,
may they not be deprived from fortune duly acquired, All have karma as their own.
Thinking of Family…
Thinking of Friends…
Thinking of those that have passed, friends, family, known and unknown, before and before…
Thinking of a person I know but is not a close friend
Thinking of a person I have seen but not met…
Thinking of a person I know of that I have never seen
Thinking of a person I am neutral about
Thinking of a person I have had difficulty with or do not like
Thinking of a person that has had difficulties or does not like me.
Thinking of a person that I hate or I think hates me.
Expand it to all animals, in the air, in the waters, on the ground, and under the ground.
Expand that to all of these… …and all living or non living beings… Beings coming to birth, and leaving this life,
There are a few places this practice can fall apart. The first is giving compassion to ourselves, to wish any well upon ourselves seems like a problem as we often feel we do not deserve this compassion. After all, isn't all life suffering? Therefore I must suffer? (there are reasons this is totally incorrect, which I go over in another post).
We often suffer from imposter syndrome or some other similar issue that keeps doubt in our minds. As we begin this practice, I often leave this out in the first repetition of this meditation. But only at first. It really needs to be done, and practiced over and over so that some hint of self love and caring can develop over time. This is why this Metta practice is important to do often.
The second place we can find challenges is where we are asked to think of neutral persons. The process of thinking of a 'favorite' person, as I put it in my guided meditations is a person that would be happy to see you and you would be happy to see them. A neutral person is anyone that you simply pass by in life. The attendant at the gas station, the bank teller, the checker at the store, or even the produce stocker. Those people you may not even acknowledge. This is where slowly we can bring them back into our consciousness of our community, our fellow citizens and humans. We can hopefully stop and see them as people that suffer and deserve happiness too. With this also comes the development of empathy. When we see others suffer we realize we too are sharing this experience, not just on a screen or on our phones but in real life. This is a very important concept to develop. We need lots of practice in this as we are bombarded by visual and audible violence in television, movies, video games, music and songs. We learn through repetition that people are distant from up socially and emotionally that they are expendable. It is the purpose and hope of the practice of Metta to develop some sense of outreach from our own little bubbles and see others as ourselves too.
The third and most difficult people to bring into this concept of Metta are those we have had difficulties with, that hate us, or that we hate. When I was teaching about this concept of empathy and compassion I happened across a small statue of Donald Trump in a meditation position. I thought it was a goofy little item that offered a good practice in conversation as well as practice so I bought one. I posted on some social media that I had gotten it and that a good practice for a new Buddhist would be to see the Buddha nature even in him, and to wish him well even if we disagreed with him and to have sympathetic joy for him if he won the election and wish compassion and wisdom on his opponent in the same way. For that comment I was banned from two groups and trolled for days. It was more amusing to me because I understand the practice well and was able to even offer calm and compassion to those I had triggered. It was a wonderful lesson in how not to take things personally. In fact even The Buddha had similar teachings. On the website Buddhasutra.com you can find the Akkosa Sutra, here is a copy of that.
Akkosa Sutra, The Insult
I have heard that on one occasion the Blessed One was staying near Rajagaha in the Bamboo Grove, the Squirrels' Sanctuary. Then the Brahmin Akkosaka ("Insulter") Bharadvaja heard that a Brahmin of the Bharadvaja clan had gone forth from the home life into homelessness in the presence of the Blessed One. Angered and displeased, he went to the Blessed One and, on arrival, insulted and cursed him with rude, harsh words.
When this was said, the Blessed One said to him: "What do you think, Brahmin: Do friends and colleagues, relatives and kinsmen come to you as guests?"
"Yes, Master Gautama, sometimes friends and colleagues, relatives and kinsmen come to me as guests."
"And what do you think: Do you serve them with staple and non-staple foods and delicacies?"
"Yes, sometimes I serve them with staple and non-staple foods and delicacies."
"And if they don't accept them, to whom do those foods belong?"
"If they don't accept them, Master Gautama, those foods are all mine."
"In the same way, Brahmin, that with which you have insulted me, who is not insulting; that with which you have taunted me, who is not taunting; that with which you have berated me, who is not berating: that I don't accept from you. It's all yours, Brahmin. It's all yours.
"Whoever returns insult to one who is insulting, returns taunts to one who is taunting, returns a berating to one who is berating, is said to be eating together, sharing company, with that person. But I am neither eating together nor sharing your company, Brahmin. It's all yours. It's all yours."
"The king together with his court know this of Master Gautama -- 'Gautama the contemplative is an arhat' -- and yet still Master Gautama gets angry." [1]
[The Buddha:]
Whence is there anger
for one free from anger,
tamed,
living in tune --
one released through right knowing,
calmed
and Such.
You make things worse
when you flare up
at someone who's angry.
Whoever doesn't flare up
at someone who's angry
wins a battle
hard to win.
You live for the good of both
-- your own, the other's --
when, knowing the other's provoked,
you mindfully grow calm.
When you work the cure of both
-- your own, the other's --
those who think you a fool
know nothing of Dhamma.
When this was said, the Brahmin Akkosaka Bharadvaja said to the Blessed One, "Magnificent, Master Gautama! Magnificent! Just as if he were to place upright what had been overturned, were to reveal what was hidden, were to show the way to one who was lost, or were to hold up a lamp in the dark so that those with eyes could see forms, in the same way Master Gautama has -- through many lines of reasoning -- made the Dhamma clear. I go to the Blessed One for refuge, to the Dhamma, and to the community of monks. Let me obtain the going forth in Master Gautama’s presence, let me obtain admission."
Then the Brahmin Akkosaka Bharadvaja received the going forth and the admission in the Blessed One's presence. And not long after his admission -- dwelling alone, secluded, heedful, ardent, and resolute -- he in no long time reached and remained in the supreme goal of the holy life, for which clansmen rightly go forth from home into homelessness, knowing and realizing it for himself in the here and now. He knew: "Birth is ended, the holy life fulfilled, the task done. There is nothing further for the sake of this world." And so Ven. Bharadvaja became another one of the Arhats.
This was the teaching that I most associated with those trolls and triggered people that were rather upset, I also had to practice and really see them without that suffering and that they too should be happy and find what they want. You see, often in the sutras we can see a concept of staying 'in tune' this has to do with the middle path. For example, a guitar that has strings that are too tight will soon break and those that are too loose will not play. This is a part of our training where we need to see both sides and not take sides too quickly nor out of emotive upset.
Often for first timers practicing the Metta sutta I edit out that part as well, it is difficult, especially for those that have PTSD and previous trauma. Many times this can bring up more anxiety and is not conducive to continuing meditation and contemplative practice.
The cure,
So what do we do? In the beginning of this meditation I often do not include the self or difficult people. I know that this does not follow the specific sutta nor the teachings, but I have to be careful as I am working with people in a psychiatric and rehabilitation hospital and they are fragile. On a second run of this guided meditation I can add in the self as they now know what it feels like to give love and compassion to a 'favorite' being. I feel that compassion is like a muscle and it needs to become flexible and strong with continuous practice over time, with small steps at first. We would not just jump into a marathon without at least stretching and practicing a little right? As we go over this practice again and again, it gets easier and easier. Soon we are even thinking about it in our daily routine, not even near a meditation cushion or class. We do see the checker or the road worker and have a little more compassion, we see the homeless or ill or angry or whatever and can see them as beings worthy of our compassion and that makes us stronger morally and ethically. This is the foundation of empathy in my opinion.
The fatigue,
We are compassion fatigued, empathetically apathetic. We lose our sight of what it means to be human and a part of humankind... We are overworked and stressed, we have to make ends meet and find ways to maintain our lives in the onslaught of inflation, poor service, price increases, social injustice, all sorts of 'isms' and much much more. It is hard to keep a level head at times, especially when others are also in the same boat or worse off.
IF we can develop a little compassion and empathy we can wisely change the world a meditation at a time.
Restructuring our practice.
When we are fatigued we not only need rest, but rejuvenation. This is where the practice of silent abiding or calm abiding, equanimity and just plain sleep and play come to the rescue. We can come back to compassion when we are well rested and fresh. This is why in my classes I have a time for just breathing and calming then go into the guided thinking of Metta.
Wednesday, July 14, 2021
Harmful meditation? Here are my comments on recent papers and studies.
My commentary on an article about the 'harms' of meditation. All of my comments are in THIS BLUE.
Can Meditation Cause You Harm?
A new study investigates whether mindfulness may have bad side effects for some people.
BY MARIANNE SPOON | SEPTEMBER 25, 2020Potential side effects are often front and center when considering taking medicine for physical or mental conditions, but information is less clear with treatments like meditation that don’t come in pill form.
There is a very good reason for this. For one, meditation is difficult to study and have 'animal studies' or even control groups. The psyche is very unique and difficult to test even in the best of studies. Pills have a set of chemicals that we can isolate and know exactly their attributes and effects on human physiology. Thoughts or 'lack of thought' as some people understand meditation does not have the same effects on human physiology.
Popular media and case studies have recently highlighted negative side effects from meditation—increases in depression, anxiety, and even psychosis or mania—but few studies have looked at the issue in depth across large numbers of people.
Yes, however, over 2,600 years of empirical and well documented work has gone into many practices of meditation we know today. There are plenty of anecdotal and personal accounts of people that have indeed suffered and even committed suicide from meditating. The cinch pin is the method, understanding of the process of meditation and teaching.
SIDE EFFECTS TO MEDITATION?
At Brown University, the Varieties of Contemplative Experience research project studies meditation experiences that are "unexpected, challenging, difficult, distressing, or impairing of functioning." They describe these challenges in a 2017 study.
Read "The Dark Knight of the Soul" in The Atlantic.
In a recent paper featured in the journal Psychological Medicine, researchers at the Center for Healthy Minds at the University of Wisconsin–Madison found that people who took part in the most common and widely available secular mindfulness program did not experience psychological harm at a rate higher than people in control groups who did not take part in the program.
When we write a paper it is most proper to have a reference, for this paper 'Prevalence of harm in mindfulness-based stress reduction' it specifically states; "We find no evidence that MBSR leads to higher rates of harm relative to waitlist control on any primary or secondary outcome. On many indices of harm across multiple outcomes, community MBSR was significantly preventative of harm." SO basically the whole premise of the article is not much more than clickbait and nonsense. It is basically trying to cause distress in people that are considering meditation (but will not read the actual article) and to give fodder to those that try and debunk meditation as a viable and useful tool in psychotherapy, sociotherapy and even pain control.
As meditation joins a growing list of treatment options for stress, depression, and substance abuse, so does the need to understand when it’s effective and when it may pose risks.
“With any treatment of any kind—behavioral or drug—there are two sides,” says Matt Hirshberg, a 2019 National Academy of Education/Spencer Foundation postdoctoral research fellow at the Center who led the study. “What are the benefits and what are the risks of harm? The research on mindfulness meditation has overwhelmingly focused on the benefits—how it works, to what extent it works, and so on. This paper intended to provide empirical estimates of potential risks.”
I agree that we need to honestly look at possible harm in the practice of meditation but not to overstate it or blow it out of proportion. One of the problems I have seen in speaking to many that have practiced meditation in one form or another and teached for decades is that when someone does not have a good mental health status to begin with it can lead to more trouble. Especially when many MBSR instructors have very little training and the premise of MBSR is most basically rumination without any moral teachings. In Buddhism's version of meditation which gave birth to the MBSR movement one of the main aspects of Buddhist teachings was abandoned. That is the Four Noble Truths, Noble Eight Fold Path, and Dependent Origination/The Wheel of Becoming or Samsara... and the entire concept those portray as 'Sila'. One of the most unfortunate things about this study paper as well as MBSR itself is that a main aspect of meditation practice is also ignored. It is not really designed to deal with outright mental illness. Meditation practice is a very true and useful tool in mental health. There is a difference.
In the analysis, researchers examined data from more than 2,150 adults who took part in a community health clinic Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) class between 2002 and 2016. MBSR is a standard eight-week mindfulness program typically taught in person that is offered widely in health care settings.
A good study size but only in one metro area and hardly representative of the population or even the meditation practitioner population. I was unable to find what people in the paper were under treatment for and how they ended up in the MBSR program.
The team looked at before-and-after results on a common assessment of psychological symptoms and a measure of troublesome physical symptoms. They also included data from three National Institutes of Health-sponsored studies on MBSR that had people who were randomly assigned to control groups and compared harm in those studies with community MBSR. This allowed the group to examine results and levels of harm in people who did not take MBSR.
There are a slew of surveys for mental health and psychological symptom surveys but there is no mention of which one was used or if it was merely set up by the writers of the original paper.
Because there is no standard way to assess harm, researchers looked at several common measures of harm, including whether average symptoms worsened, the number of people who reported increased symptoms, the number reporting greater than a 35% increase in symptoms, and clinically significant harm, or the proportion of people who reported a categorical worsening in symptoms (e.g., from normal symptom level to mildly symptomatic).
The scientific team did not find a single instance in which harm that was experienced by people in MBSR (community or research) was greater than the increased negative symptoms experienced by people in the control group who received no treatment.
Again, here is the important take away of this article. There was not a single instance of 'harm'. So does that mean that it is absolutely safe? Not by a long shot really. Someone in severe mental disruption should probably not be told to do meditative practices even with a seasoned teacher or coordinator. They should be evaluated properly and treated for any physical or chemical issues that are found first. Then and only then could a meditation practice be considered.
For instance, if someone presents with serious and detailed suicidal ideations and they begin meditation, it is likely that they may ruminate on why and how they will proceed rather than find anything useful to really work on.
In addition, on about half of the harm measures the researchers examined, rates of harm in MBSR were significantly lower than those in the no-treatment group. Hirshberg notes that these findings “suggest that MBSR may not only be no more harmful than no treatment, it may actually be preventative of developing increased psychological and physical symptoms.”
Again, basically this seems to be a pitch for MBSR even when compared to people that did nothing. This smells of fluff rather than academically serious research.
The researchers were careful to note, however, that more research of potential preventative effects is needed because most preventative effects were observed in comparisons between community MBSR and people in the research MBSR studies who received no treatment—groups that had significantly different levels of symptoms at baseline.
If you read enough research papers, this is the rule. Always note that more research needs to be done. This is a staple of all research as there is no research that definitively proves anything. There is always outliers, mistakes, small sample sizes and amendments to be made. Not that this was not a good effort, but it is not the end for sure.
I for one, look forward to more research on the subject as well as collaboration between MBSR and other forms of meditation. This may help us gain insights into how the mind really does work and how it can be actively and passively helped into a more healthy and skillful state of being.
Still, Hirshberg warns, this doesn’t mean that no one participating in MBSR experiences harm. It remains important to expand the research to understand the experiences of the small number of individuals who have adverse reactions. Hirshberg also noted that due to limitations in the data, they were not able to examine whether socioeconomic status or race and ethnicity were related to harm.“The fact that incidents of harm appear to be low in MBSR is important because most mindfulness-based interventions are derivatives of MBSR, and it’s the root of practices we see offered in schools, health care, and workplaces,” says Hirshberg. “It’s really important to know the prevalence of people who are having adverse reactions.”
Another question to explore further is the subjective interpretation of harm. In some meditation traditions, temporary discomfort, negative thoughts, and unusual somatic experiences might be indicative of progress in one’s practice.
Spectacular point, in fact there was a few different articles on this and I have a good study that did expand on what we know. Here is that link. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5584749/
“The distinction is not always made clear enough when we hear about cases of harm,” says Hirshberg. “Meditation practice means many different things, from intensive meditation retreats for months or even years to 10 minutes of daily practice at home. Most reported cases of harm are related to more intensive practice. They are really different categories. We can’t infer about harm in intensive practice from these findings and, similarly, we cannot infer about potential harm in MBSR or similar programs from harm following intensive practice.”
I am curious as to what 'more intensive' really means. The article here gives a great list of practices and does recognize there are many different opinions and ways TO meditate. On the one hand I would consider an MBSR treatment class of six weeks to be pretty intensive for someone that can barely sit still for a few minutes.
This article was originally published on the Center for Healthy Minds
Reminder: The 'BLUE' font is my addition and commentary on this article. If you go to the original article study there are some good references to look at . Here are a couple more.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5584749/
https://www.insider.com/why-meditation-can-be-bad-2018-3#6-it-might-damage-your-sense-of-self-6
https://www.vice.com/en/article/vbaedd/meditation-is-a-powerful-mental-tool-and-for-some-it-goes-terribly-wrong
https://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/can_meditation_cause_you_harm
Marianne Spoon wrote the original article which appeared in Center for Healthy Minds. This is her bio.
Marianne leads communications and marketing for the Center for Healthy Minds at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where she produces written and multimedia stories, coordinates with media interested in the Center’s work and manages its brand and external-facing publications.
Before joining the University of Wisconsin–Madison, she conducted behavioral research with monkeys and worked as a freelance journalist for media outlets including the Discovery Channel, HowStuffWorks.com and Atlanta’s NPR affiliate.
Numbness, agitation, Doubt of your practice, teacher or life itself. leg pain, back pain, Sleepiness, Insomnia, Panic, Chest tension, Nausea, Feelings of withdrawal, disgust in the mundane, impostor syndrome, Loss of interest, Loss of joy, Stress, Addiction (relapse), Chronic pain, Mood disorders, Psychiatric disorders, Hyper-arousal, trauma flashback, emotional instability, Hypersensitivity, disembodiment, dissociation, sadness, paranoia, 'Zen sickness' (ear ringing, heat or cold feeling, sweats, fatigue, , Emptiness, Emotional, Return of repressed memory, Guilt, Negativity, dizziness, loss of hope, suicidal ideations, fear,
In this, the old adage; 'The obstacle becomes the path'. It is these that become our most devoted teachers and lessons.
Joseph Campbell said. 'Follow your bliss' so as a remedy, stop and do something relaxing and nice, make a meal, feed the birds, have a glass of iced tea. Listen to music.
Sunday, August 23, 2020
Setting the sitting, The Seven Points of Posture
Setting the sitting, The Seven Points of Posture
The Centered Path, Part 5 of Buddhist Basics (Ref: Mahasatipatthana Sutta)
Thus I have heard.
An anchor to contemplation and mindfulness is sitting in meditation posture. Although there is no one posture that is ‘right’ for everyone, it is generally agreed that this is the best way to achieve progress in meditation practice. Making your position0 a constant ‘habit’ will help you.
You should be stable in your position, like a mountain. Your head is the peak, you can observe the universe from there. Sitting gives you an excellent way to stabilize your mind as you do not usually sit in posture. Your posture should emulate (unattached) confidence and calm. No matter what, comfort is key. You may sit on the bare floor, on a mat, a zafu and zabuton, or a chair. A folded big towel or a small cushion is totally acceptable.
Legs: should be in either Lotus (if you can get in and out of it), Half lotus, Burmese style (indian style with one leg forward), Zazen (kneeling on ankles),
Back: If you sit in a chair or on the floor, the back should be straight but not rigid. Imagine your vertebrae are all stacked like coins, or that your head is attached by a string to the sky.. Your head will float on the neck.
Shoulders: SHould be relaxed and under the line of the ear from the side. You may want to roll your shoulders around a couple times before you start so they are not tense. Shoulders may feel heavy as they relax and you begin to feel the weight of the arms.
Head: Not too far forward or back, just above the shoulders, the chin slightly tucked and relaxed. Lips should be gently closed, allow your face to soften, the brow to relax.
Eyes: Optionally you can keep your eyes closed, focusing your gaze to the point between the eyebrows (this helps concentration but can also make you more sleepy and dull). If your eyes are open, keep them about ⅓ open, gently gazing to about where your head will touch the ground if you were to lean forward.
Tongue: The tongue should be relaxed in the mouth, to really keep energy and attention place the tip of the tongue on the roof of the mouth behind the teeth as if saying the letter ‘N’. It can help you if you start to really relax and drool.
Hands: There are multiple hand positions called ‘mudras’ For basic meditation we can stick to three; The mindfulness mudra, hands palm down on the thighs, the open mind mudra, hands palms up on the thighs, or the meditation mudra, right hand in left palm in the lap with the thumbs gently touching. You can use the mudras as part of your intention when mediation begins. Other mudras can help achieve and maintain mental states, such as the teaching, calming, and
Is it OK to lie down for meditation? You can, but it commonly becomes ‘sleeping meditation. Walking or standing is a perfect posture as well, gentle calmness and comfort are key. Be mindful when you move as in walking or if you need to change position or scratch an itch. Feel free to adapt for any health issues you have, back, knees, hips, etc. Remember comfort is more important than looking good in meditation. 0