ÉÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍ» º º º BuddhaNet: Buddhist Info Network Buddha Dharma Education Assoc. º º Web Site: www.buddhanet.net PO Box K1020 Haymarket NSW 2000 º º Email: bdea@buddhanet.net Tel: +61-2-92123071 AUSTRALIA º º º ÈÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍͼ Balance in Meditation by Ven. Pannyavaro As a meditator it is necessary to have the ability to manage and adjust your own practice. Maintaining your balance in meditation is a vital part of managing the meditation experience. It is a matter of harmonizing three factors: //effort//, //concentration// and //awareness//. Too much effort makes the mind restless; while too much concentration has the effect of narrowing and restricting the awareness. Effort and concentration are active factors while awareness is passive. As you practice, keeping in mind the characteristics of these three meditation factors and applying them appropriately will allow you to adjust, harmonize and keep your practice in balance. For meditative concentration to be right, the type has to be appropriate to the mode of meditation. In Serenity Meditation (//Samatha//) the meditator fixes on a single object, ignoring secondary objects to become absorbed in one object. While in Insight Meditation (//Vipassana//) the practice is a moment-to-moment knowing of various objects as they arise without fixing on any particular object. Actually, in insight meditation it is really a matter of an //intensification// of awareness rather than concentration. So, if you wish to change the meditation mode, from Serenity to Insight, any fixing or clinging to an object has to be dropped to allow for an open, moment-to-moment awareness of whatever is predominant in your experience. During insight meditation practice, a state of receptivity is cultivated. So because of its restrictive nature it is not useful to induce concentration as such, rather sufficient concentration will naturally arise by being //continuous// with the attention. There is no problem of having too much awareness, as there is with the factors of effort and concentration. It is not something that you can overdo, it is more likely that there is //not enough// awareness to help balance the factors of effort and concentration. So, really it's more important to put the effort into maintaining the awareness. Further, continuity of attention also produces calm and a 'sweetening of the mind', so there can be the same experience of wholesome mind-states similar to the concentration meditations, but without restricting the meditative attention in any way. Ways of relating to the meditation experience to help maintain balance //Witnessing your experience (develops a Witnessing Consciousness)// Noting //impartially// whatever you are experiencing, while you are experiencing it - //will lead to spaciousness in the mind//. //Non-Clinging (letting go!)// Rather than seeking gratification of wishes, impulses, desires, there has to be at least some degree of "non-clinging" that is, giving up, to create the space to see. //The Removal of the Censor (dropping the critical mind)// An attitude of acceptance of all thoughts, emotional feelings and sensations into awareness without discrimination or selection - which is //an uncensored experience// - //free of judgments//. //An Attitude of Neutrality (i.e., no posturing or positioning)// An attitude of neutrality that is restricted to the bare registering of physical and mental events without posturing or positioning - //therefore not interfering with the experience (non-reactive awareness)//. //Cultivating Receptivity: (allows intimacy, which is to be close to the experience)// Awareness practice is not about controlling the experience but being sensitive to and intimate with what is observed from a //place of receptivity//. That is, being open and allowing to whatever happens to comes into the awareness (//choiceless awareness//). An image often used to describe the practice of awareness is that of walking a tightrope. In order to do so, you must necessarily pay attention to the balance. In meditation practice, this applies especially to how you are relating to your experience. Reaching out to grasp the object (//attaching//) or pushing it away (//rejecting//) are both reactions that are unbalancing. Keeping your balance is developing a mind that does not cling or reject, like or dislike and is without attachment or condemnation. Equipoise and 'on-looking' equanimity in the face of life's inevitable stress and conflict is to practice the Buddha's //Middle Way//. Developing the ability to adjust and manage your effort in practice is essential. A certain effort is involved in developing moment-to-moment awareness, but it is not the effort to attain anything in the future. The effort is to stay in the present, within the present moment context. Just paying attention with equanimity to what is happening from moment-to-moment. The Buddha gave an example of just how attentive we should be. He told of a person who was ordered to walk through a crowd with a water jug full to the brim balanced on his head. Behind him walked a soldier with a sword. If a single drop was spilt the soldier would cut off his head! That is the quality of attention needed. So you can be sure that the person with the jug walked very attentively. Yet, it has to be a //relaxed// awareness. If there is too much force or strain the least jostling will cause the water to spill. The person with the jug has to be loose and rhythmic, flowing with the changing scene, yet staying attentive in each moment. This is the kind of care and precision we should take in practising insight meditation, being relaxed yet alert. In this way, the training helps to maintain your balance and the ability to live in harmony with others.