Archive for the ‘Guided Meditation’ Category

Guided Meditation On Impermanence

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Centering Meditation

- Bell
Breathing in,
I am present in the here and now.
Breathing out,
I am happy to be here
Breathing in, Presence
Breathing out, Happiness
- Bell.

(repeat if necessary)

Introduction

Well this is my last leading of the AES Sangha, and I don’t think I have to tell you that I will miss all of you a lot. I’ve prepared something that addresses my reticence to leave all of you.

Last Saturday I was able to spend seven hours at a meditation retreat led by Venerable Tenzin Chogkyi, and American nun, at the Tushita Center.

She presented several excellent brief outlines of guided meditations that each lasted about 10 to 15 minutes. One of the ones that she presented was a Guided Meditation on Impermanence.

I’ve chosen to go give my own version of this meditation today, because I personally have a problem with embracing change. As a child growing up in the Foreign Service, I never really got over leaving my friends and school every few years and it’s the main reason why I really didn’t go overseas again for about twenty years and certainly not for extended periods of time.

However, I also have a personal problem with the purportedly Buddhist concept that since all things are impermanent, detachment from the physical world is the path to personal peace and perhaps even enlightenment…

So for the second part of the reading I will read an excerpt from Mark Epstein’s “Open To Desire”, which I feel promises to flesh out the concept of Buddhist asceticism and serve as a balancing weight for the first meditation. I’ll only read the first ten pages of his introduction, but that is enough for you to get the thrust of his thesis, I think.

Meditation on Impermanence

[bell]

Breathing In
I consider that a static, unchanging reality is an illusion.
Breathing Out
I open myself to change.

[bell]

Breathing In
My mind is a kaleidoscope of cascading images
Breathing Out
Is my mind still? Or is it moving?

[bell]

Breathing In,
I suck oxygen into my lungs and ultimately into my blood.
Breathing Out,
I release my breath in a stream of carbon dioxide atoms that were in my body for a brief time.

[bell]

Breathing In
I am aware of my heart beating, pumping my blood-flow,
carrying oxygen to every cell in my body.
Breathing Out
My heart is still beating, but is it the same heart?
Is it the same blood? Are my cells the same?

[bell]

Breathing In
I consider the idea that there are 150 different types of cells in my body: skin cells, blood cells, nerve cells, bone cells, brain cells, muscle cells, hair cells, kidney cells, heart cells, liver cells, spleen cells, mucous cells, eye cells, and others.
Breathing Out
I consider that each of these cells has a different life-span, and they constantly die and replace themselves throughout my life span.

[bell]

Breathing In
I consider that my seven skin layers of dermis and epidermis shed like a snake and replace themselves every 21 to 28 days. I generate a whole new heart every 8 months. I synthesize a whole new liver every 5 months. The surface layer of the mucosal lining in the intestines quickly replaces itself every 3 to 5 days. Because skeletal bone cells are made up of a harder matrix of substances it can take up to 7-10 years for bone cells to die and replace.
Breathing Out
Consider the idea that everyone in this room right now gets a whole new body every 7-10 years. Even my brain will replace itself, entirely.

[bell]

Breathing In
I know that there is a tiny universe beyond the cellular level. Where atoms contain sub-atomic particles separated by relatively vast distances, whirling around each other at an incredible rate, never still and never the same from one-micro-second to the next.
Breathing Out
I know that at the sub-atomic level my body is mostly space, where transient energy passes.

[bell]

Breathing In
I am aware of the world outside my body and mind. I and the Earth and the other planets are whirling around the sun. The Sun is on its own interstellar trajectory, and the biosphere of the earth is totally dependent upon the sun and the rain to fuel the lives of every animal and plant.
Breathing Out
I see that the universe, and all things in it, are in motion and never still.

[bell]

Breathing In
I am aware of the illusion of a non-changing reality and that the attempt to cling to things that I don’t want to change is a major cause of suffering.
Breathing Out
I acknowledge change. I won’t necessarily embrace it, but I acknowledge change and will try to not let it be a cause of suffering.

———————-

-dennis landi © 2009

Loving-kindness Guided Meditation

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

LOVING-KINDNESS MEDITATION,
AES Sangha, New Delhi, India
APRIL 14TH, 2009.
-DENNIS LANDI

Centering Meditation

— Bell

Breathing in,
I am present in the here and now.
Breathing out,
I am happy to be here

Breathing in, Presence
Breathing out, Happiness

— Bell.

(repeat if necessary)

—————

Introduction

Today I thought I would present a Loving-kindess meditation.

First I will read a short passage, “Momma Zen” written by Karen Miller, published in the “Best Bhuddist Writing, 2007″, by Shambala Sun. I think she quickly captures the essence from whence all loving-kindness emanates…

Just so you all know what to expect, I’ll briefly outline the basic elements in a Loving-kindness meditation.

Stages of Loving-kindness meditation.

Phase 1) Loving acceptance of self by overcoming feelings of self-doubt or ill-will towards others. This technique consists of identifying four types of persons to develop Loving-kindness towards:

i) A Respected or beloved Person, perhaps a teacher

ii) Your Dearly Beloved: a family member or close friend.

iii) A Neutral Person you have no particular feeling toward, for example a shop-clerk you see every week.

iv) A Hostile Person: someone you are having difficulty with.

Phase 2) Directional Pervasion, where we systematically direct the feeling of Loving-kindness to all points of the Compass.

Phase 3) Non-specific Pervasion, where we radiate feelings of universal love.

In this process we transition from a particular attached love to an unconditioned, all-embracing quality of loving-kindness.

I will be presenting the guided meditation with the “Breathing In / Breathing Out” framework that I associate with Thich Nhat Hanh style of guided meditation and this Sangha…

————————–

The Reading

[Begin reading story, "Momma Zen", by Karen Miller.]

— Bell

The Guided Meditation

Breathing in
In my mind I see my teacher

Breathing out
I smile with love to my teacher

Breathing in, my teacher
Breathing out, I smile

— Bell

Breathing in
In my mind I can see my parents

Breathing out
I smile and bathe my parents with loving-kindness

Breathing in, I see my parents
Breathing out, I smile lovingly

— Bell

Breathing in
In my mind I can see my close friend

Breathing out
I bathe my friend with loving-kindness

Breathing in I see my friend
Breathing out my friend is wrapped in loving-kindness

— Bell

Breathing in
In my mind I see someone for which I have no particular feelings, perhaps a shop-keeper I see once a week…

Breathing out
I send loving-kindness to this person

Breathing in I am neutral,
Breathing out I send Loving thoughts to that person

— Bell

Breathing in
In my mind I see a person with whom I am having difficulties

Breathing out
I send loving thoughts to this person with whom I am having difficulties

Breathing in – Personal Difficulties
Breathing out – Love

— Bell

Breathing in
I touch the loving-kindness within me

Breathing out
I give loving-kindness to myself

Breathing in, loving-kindness
Breathing out, loving-kindness

— Bell

Breathing in
I visualize dharma practitioners all over the world

Breathing out
I reach out and touch with love all other dharma practitioners, east, west, north, and south

Breathing in, I see all friends who are practicing
Breathing out, I touch them all with love

— Bell

Breathing in
In my mind I can see the universe and all beings

Breathing out
I radiate love to all beings

Breathing in, the universe
Breathing out, love to all

— Bell

-Dennis Landi

Continuation Meditation

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009

Continuation Meditation

[Wake the BELL]

[One Breath]

[BELL]

[Three Breaths]

[BELL]

[Three Breaths]

[BELL]

[Three Breaths]

listen, listen,
this wonderful sound brings me back to
my true home.

[BELL]

breathing in I know that I am breathing in.
breathing out I know that I am breathing out.

[BELL]

in out
deep, slow
calm, ease
smile, release
present moment, wonderful moment

[BELL]

who am I?

what is “me”?

my eyes are not me
my ears are not me
my nose, my tongue, my body and my mind
are not me

that which i see is not me
that which i hear is not me
that which i smell, taste, touch and think are not me

seeing is not me
hearing is not me
smelling, tasting, touching, and thinking are not me

the element of earth is not me
the elements water, fire, air, space and consciousness are not me
i am not bound or restrained by the elements

birth and death cannot touch me
i smile because i have never been born
and i will never die

birth does not give me existence
death does not give me existence
death does not take existence away

with inspiration i continue
with expiration i continue

[BELL]

[Three Breaths]

[BELL]

[Three Breaths]

[BELL]

————-

-dennis landi © 2009

————-

Note:
The main part of the above text was adapted from Thich Nhat Hahn’s “Old Path, White Clouds”, Chapter: “Tears of Happiness”, where Saraputra ministers to the dying Sudata.