| Meditation & the Senses |
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We have five sensory organs - Eyes, Nose, Ears, Tongue and Skin. Meditation can happen when there is harmony in five senses. When you sit for meditation,observe all your sensory organs. Observe your breath and eye movement... Is your breath steady? Is the prana haphazard or is it going smooth and normal? Are your eyes steady? If your eyes are going all over the place, the mind is not in a meditative state.
When the senses are steady, the soul also becomes peaceful. Your being, your spirit inside you becomes steady.
“You become totally relaxed, yet at the same time you possess sharpness of awareness, strength of intelligence. Your senses become so clear. You can see better, think better, hear better. Like a pure crystal, your senses come to reflect all objects as one Divinity.” ~ Sri Sri Ravishankar
Moving beyond the senses – essential for meditationSenses are the bridge, between objects and the Self. Joy is the nature of Self, but the five sensory organs see joy in external objects.
The following thoughts shake the senses:
When the senses shake even for a few minutes they become tired, and they are unable to perceive/experience true joy.
Mind gallops towards the world of five senses. You may sit quietly – with eyes closed or open. But where does your mind go?
Distractions of the senses:
Craving for any of these experiences in the mind - can stop you from being in the present moment. When the mind withdraws from the senses, you are ready for meditation.
Steadiness in Prana – essential for meditationWhen the senses get steady - then the prana (which was shaky inside you) also becomes straight. When you don’t feel good, or when you are down, unhappy or afraid, observe your prana - it is very shaky.
How to make the prana steady?
You will experience that the prana becomes steady.
Samadhi is steadiness in prana. This centeredness brings you to a space - where you are completely hollow and empty.
Dispassion (vairagya) – essential for meditationDispassion has to occur - whenever you want to sit for meditation. For dispassion your senses need to be in your control. By following the instructions below, you can control you sensory organs.
For a few moments tell yourself:
Depriving your senses of the craving (even for a few moments) – takes you from the object, back to its source. This is Vairagya or dispassion. Meditation is good - when it is practiced with dispassion. Meditation can then provide you the rest that you are longing for.
Freedom from Desires – Essential for MeditationYour mind is tired, is burnt down by galloping on one desire after another. Just turn back and see all the desires you have achieved - have they given you rest? No! They have created few more desires. Have desires given you fulfillment? No! They only gave you more hope that you can achieve more/have more - and that has put you on another trip.
So you are on a merry go round. It’s not even merry - only go round. The horses on the merry go rounds do not go anywhere - but give you an illusion that you have traveled miles & miles. Life has been such a journey - where you are galloping on your desires, yet reaching nowhere.
Desire is an obstruction to meditation. A mind that is obsessed with desire cannot meditate.
You are above stimuliRepeated enjoyment of external stimuli - causes inertia and dullness:
With awareness - the stimuli lose their significance; whether they exist or not makes no difference. When the sun is shining, it makes no difference if the candle is lit or not.
Realizing that all pleasures are just stimuli - and that you are more than just stimuli - brings freedom.
By vairagya (dispassion) and with awareness that you are more than just stimuli, you can achieve freedom from desires. It also helps you overcome the obstructions caused by the senses during meditation. |
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