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Hello all. I've done some meditation and had a strong experience of stillness. But what does it mean, and what to do next?
Hello all. I've done some meditation and had a strong experience of stillness. But what does it mean, and what to do next?
Continue being still. Stop trying to do things or think overmuch.Hello all. I've done some meditation and had a strong experience of stillness. But what does it mean, and what to do next?
Wait and see what comes out of the "woodwork".Hello all. I've done some meditation and had a strong experience of stillness. But what does it mean, and what to do next?
That is really great advice, @SunstoneI'm no teacher, guru, or authority in this area, but in my own experience, the best thing that you can do now is take a hint from the Zen monks and forget (if you can) about your experience of stillness. Apparently, dwelling on it will inhibit or prevent you from having further such experiences because you risk becoming attached to it, and attachments tend to inhibit or prevent spiritual experiences.
Don't try to fix it in your memory. That's just clinging to it, becoming attached to it. Besides you don't need to remember it for it to change you for the better. Just as you don't need to recall all the influences on your life that formed and shaped you for them to have formed and shaped you.
By the way, so far as I know, it means you're on the right path. Now try to forget you ever had it, just as quickly as you would forget a sign you see on the freeway telling you you're headed in the right direction!
From my short experience with meditation, , the idea is to simply keep going. The flotsam and jetsam of experience one has along the way are, necessarily in the past, so just be... here... ...now. The biggest taboo is developing preconceptions about what lies around the next inner corner. Try to avoid recreating the fleeting experiences as that could quagmire one into thinking they are doing something wrong - and so they are.Hello all. I've done some meditation and had a strong experience of stillness. But what does it mean, and what to do next?
Hello all. I've done some meditation and had a strong experience of stillness. But what does it mean, and what to do next?
Hello all. I've done some meditation and had a strong experience of stillness. But what does it mean, and what to do next?
Thanks all. The general advice seems to be that it is good to keep an open mind about such experiences, and carry on? But what in your experience is "beyond" the stillness?
Again, though I am fairly inexperienced in meditation, over the decades I have found many things beyond this stillness. The downside is that non-dual experiences can only be hinted at. I can only reiterate @Treks comment,Thanks all. The general advice seems to be that it is good to keep an open mind about such experiences, and carry on? But what in your experience is "beyond" the stillness?
Just know there is more beyond this phase. Much more, and that is where the fun really begins. My best advice is simply continue your meditations but do not rush to figure it all out as you will invariably come to the wrong conclusions due to lack of data.It might be best not to ask and not establish an expectation within yourself.
Again, though I am fairly inexperienced in meditation, over the decades I have found many things beyond this stillness. The downside is that non-dual experiences can only be hinted at. I can only reiterate @Treks comment,
Just know there is more beyond this phase. Much more, and that is where the fun really begins. My best advice is simply continue your meditations but do not rush to figure it all out as you will invariably come to the wrong conclusions due to lack of data.
Yes, because that is when you are no longer focusing on the experience itself, but are conceptualizing about the experience. The trick is to stop thinking and just do. It's harder than it sounds, LOL.Just out of curiosity, when you are 'beyond the stillness,' do you find that when you attempt to focus on or understand what is happening mentally, it obscures or shuts down what you are experiencing?
Yes, because that is when you are no longer focusing on the experience itself, but are conceptualizing about the experience. The trick is to stop thinking and just do. It's harder than it sounds, LOL.
Think of it as being like watching a movie and getting caught in the detail of a particular scene. As you focus on the those details, the next parts sweep past your attention and you begin to miss things. Pretty soon you have to go back to the point you got sidetracked and start the movie from there. (I do this a lot when I start to comment on something interesting in a movie.) Not a perfect analogy, but good enough to give the idea.Thanks for answering. Just checking to see if others experience this as well.
Think of it as being like watching a movie and getting caught in the detail of a particular scene. As you focus on the those details, the next parts sweep past your attention and you begin to miss things. Pretty soon you have to go back to the point you got sidetracked and start the movie from there. (I do this a lot when I start to comment on something interesting in a movie.) Not a perfect analogy, but good enough to give the idea.
Hehe. Yeah, I agree. But, but, but my comments are so deep and insightful though!.. reminds of John Lennon's song with the words "Life is what's happening when you are busy doing other things".
i hate it when people talk to me whilst watching a film.
Hehe. Yeah, I agree. But, but, but my comments are so deep and insightful though!
What I normally do is hit pause, babble for a bit, back it up a tiny bit then hit play.
Last night, while watching a show that had a huge police presence at one point, I paused, then blurted, "Wouldn't it be hilarious if there was a large Dunkin' Donuts truck that went out for every police SWAT team? LOL! They could put gun turrets on the side of the vehicle. Imagine a fallanx of heavily armed officers protecting the doughnut truck. LOL.