Walking Meditation

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When I was 23 years old, I had the pleasure of attending a day of Mindfulness with Thich Nhat Han, the Vietnamese Zen Teacher, poet, and peace activist. My practice, my path really, began when I found his book, Peace is Every Step, in a used bookstore. It was the first book of mindfulness I read. It was the first book that spoke straight to my heart.

During that day of practice with Thay (as he is often called), I was introduced to walking as meditation. Because Thay has such a powerful presence, my first experience with this practice was profound. I felt in some ways as if I was arriving in my body for the first time. I cried. I walked silently and slowly down the Colorado street behind a being so full of love, that I was aware of myself as love. I cried and cried and cried. Thay offered us a poem of his to work with as we walked

I have arrived

I am home

In the here and the now

I feel solid, I feel free

In the ultimate I dwell

I use these words in my practice to this very day. I have even offered them in some of my yoga classes as a moving meditation.

On a practical note, walking meditation can be a great bridge, a way to bring our practice out of formal meditation and into our daily life. One mindful, present step can snowball into a life lived with fullness, intention, and clarity (even while washing the dishes!)

one step, and then the next. again and again. coming home.

Here is an article That Thich Nhat Hanh wrote on walking meditation if you would like to explore his work .

Wholeheartedly,

Kim

Breath as Anchor

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One of my teachers often says “coming home to the breath” when we are using the breath as an anchor in meditation. Once I really integrated this, and it took a surprisingly long time for me to really “get it”, my practice blossomed. There can be something robotic and rigid about a basic breath awareness practice when you engage with it just in your “mind”. Breath in, breath out. In, out. In, out… When people say they get bored during a basic practice, I suspect this might be a contributing factor. When we feel the return of awareness to the breath as a coming home, an arriving in the aliveness of presence, each return becomes a gift.

That is not to say that every practice will feel amazing. Sometimes what we come home to is an angry self who hasn’t been listened to, tended to. If we can bring compassion into these times, that is where the real power and growth will emerge.

While we are always looking for the lived experience in practice, the “anchor”, the structure, is also quite powerful. Holding awareness in one place, steadies the mind which has a way of quieting the heart. I sometimes use the image of a snow globe. In our daily life, things swirl around us, clouding our view. There is constant stimulation. When we stop, when we find an anchor, all that has been swirling around us slows and falls away. In that space we can begin to really see what is happening in ourselves and the world around us. In the quiet, the reality is revealed.

Body Scan Meditation/ Day 3

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Even a quick body scan practice like the one we did in practice today is a great thing to do if you are feeling anxious or your mind is very active. Drawing our energy and awareness down into the body anchors us to the present moment. Thoughts are often caught in the past or jumping ahead into the future but the body always exists in the here and now. When you draw awareness into the body you are entering into a deep connection with the aliveness of the present moment. This is where your life unfolds. Where you can touch love, gratitude. The past is gone. The future is a mystery. This moment is here waiting for you to recognize it.

If you have only a moment, take that moment, feel your feet, feel the fact of the body. The stability of the body. Notice how even this small shift can have a profound impact on the way you feel.

If this practice is new to you, you may find it easy to feel certain parts of the body and more challenging to sense others. That is fine. You might also feel nothing or numbness. Again, whatever you feel is fine. Notice how quickly you are to judge your experience. If you find numbness, you might notice what it is like to be aware of numbness. If there is discomfort in the body, what is it like to bring kind attention to discomfort?

The body scan meditation can be slowed down, stretched out in all kinds of ways. I will include links to some longer practices if you would like to really dive into this powerful practice.

Wholeheartedly,

Kim


With Jon Kabbat Zinn

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_DTmGtznab4

With Tara Brach

https://www.tarabrach.com/guided-meditation-body-scan-living-presence-11-min/

With Christiane Wolf

https://insighttimer.com/christianewolf/guided-meditations/gentle-body-scan-meditation


Lovingkindness (Metta) Day 1 of Meditation Challenge!

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Metta, is often translated as lovingkindness, or friendliness. Starting any endeavor, especially a practice designed to strip away what is false and takes you to the heart of truth like meditation, is best when you begin from a place of genuine compassion and care. I wish that I had been introduced to metta practice before I began other forms of formal meditation practice. In my experience, Metta has a way of softening the harsher edges of the inner critic. Over time, there can even develop a real tenderness toward the guardedness and fear that causes the inner critic to speak in such unkind ways.

I spent way too long battling with my mind, with thoughts, with emotions, with my very sense of who I was and who I might never be able to be. While I most certainly have many struggles still, metta has transformed the way I relate to myself, even in my worst moments.

The practice itself can feel a bit overly precious to some, especially when you first begin. For others, it is a profound and powerful fulfilling of a deeply felt, often ignored need. My advice is to do your best to suspend your judgements. Just do the practice. You are not required to feel any particular way. The truth is, the benefits just might sneak up on you.

The practice itself can be experienced in many ways but the way it is often offered is with the repeating of simple phrases. These phrases can be altered in any way that feels authentic to you. They range from simple and short to quite long and complex. A simple way to begin is:


May I be Well

May I live with peace and ease

May I be happy


Another version that I like working with is:

May I be safe

May I be free from inner and outer harm

May I live with peace and ease

May I be happy

Traditionally the practice begins with yourself, because we cannot offer others what we do not have ourselves. In reality, many people have a hard time being with themselves. Many of us carry so much insecurity and shame and self judgement. So, as we did in our meditation today, it is often helpful to begin with a dear friend or someone who the feelings for are easy and naturally uncomplicated, even beginning with a pet works well for some. We can also try working with ourselves as a small child. For many, that is the doorway in to a kinder self connection. The practice can then move on to others. To those we love, those we don’t have strong feelings for (we call this the neutral person), and even those we have difficulty with, even those who have caused us pain. We often end by sending the phrases of practice to all beings everywhere- sensing the same need and desire for compassion and care that exists in all of us. We will explore these other layers of metta later in the month. For now we will just try to touch in and cultivate the feeling in our own bodies. I have included a few links to articles and practices that I have found useful if you want to further explore the practice of metta!

Wholeheartedly,

kim


https://jackkornfield.com/meditation-on-lovingkindness/


https://tricycle.org/magazine/metta-practice/


https://www.tarabrach.com/guided-meditation-metta-lovingkindness/


https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/feeling-it/201409/18-science-backed-reasons-try-loving-kindness-meditation




January Meditation Challenge!

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For the past two years I have been in a meditation program designed and led by the incredible teachers, Jack kornfield and Tara Brach. This training has been such a deep, meaningful journey for me and as it concludes in January, I decided that a beautiful way to honor the last month of my program is with an offering of practices to my community through a meditation challenge throughout the month of January!

The teachings are so dear to me, and those who know me can attest to the fact that I love to learn, but through this program, and with the guidance of my mentor, Augusta Hopkins, I have begun to find a different understanding- a lived, felt experience of the practice. I love the theory of applied practice, but the truth is that the power of the practice ultimately is not about the “doing” of practice (though you certainly need to take your seat and do it!). Meditation is a way to help us remember and touch the very essence of our true nature. I know that can sound oftly poetic but the proof is in the experience. I love myself with more ease and sincerity than I ever thought possible. Let me just say that again, I love myself. If you had met me 20 years ago, you would understand what a transformation that is.

I am so very excited to share these practices with you. I hope that they help you to create a dedicated routine of taking time to check in with yourself. So much of our daily life can pass by unnoticed, unlived. I started practicing so many years ago because I didn’t want to miss this life I have been gifted. I continue to practice to this day for the very same reason. I wish the same for you.

May these practices bring your life closer to you. May they ripple out and sweeten all that you touch. May they hold the difficulties with tenderness and care. That is the promise of awareness.

If you have not yet signed up for the challenge, you can do so here. Thank you for participating and supporting me, this work, these practices. May they be a benefit to all.

Wholeheartedly,

Kim