Meditation
is really about one thing: becoming more intimate and acquainted with your own
mind and being. Its purpose has flourished into numerous forms practiced by
many cultures throughout the centuries. This can be perfectly natural and its
premise is based on this simple observation: "Where your attention is, is
where you are."
Finding
the stillness within for some of us can be the most challenging task we can
ever face. This will take persistent practice on our part. Nonetheless, it is
possible, provided we are determined.
The
effects of resting in silence will be felt in your daily life. It can become an
excellent stress reducer. It gives you the opportunity to enjoy new meaning and
appreciation. As strange as it sounds, within silence is everything.
Meditation
allows our consciousness to ascend. I have been a fan of Summum
meditations. These Meditations are based on a simple yet profound saying,
"Where your attention is, is where you are."
I think
developing control over your own attention is the single most important thing
you can ever do in your life, and the Summum Meditations help you to do just
that. They help you to redirect your attention towards that aspect of your
being which holds the greatest meaning: your inner being. As your inner being
is awakened, creation unfolds itself to you, because your inner being is a
perfect, divine expression of nature and all its principles.
Most of
us talk about having a spirit or an inner being or believe we may have one.
This is because in actuality, we have no knowledge of our spirit, although many
of us may not be willing to admit this. The talks around inner being sort of
remind me of a show I was watching where Dr. Oz had sent an interviewer to the
streets, asking people: what is metabolism and where is it located? The
answers of course were nothing short of amusing. The reason for this is
that we are too involved in the drama of our physical life and the interests of
our personality, to dig into finding out. Our consciousness is confined in our
bodily nature and appetites making us unaware of the divine ego within us. The
process of awakening to our spirit or inner being may be compared to waking up
from a dream in our sleep. The concept is the same. It's just applied at a
different level.
The
technique of meditation is immersion; the concentrating of your attention at a
single point, using your “will” to fix your attention at that point. During
meditation your attention is immersed, vibrating at a single point. Using your
“will”, you prevent your attention from being attracted to the infinite other
points or distractions on the scale of consciousness. The ideal point to
immerse in, is that point of pure, alert, clear, total, undisturbed, and OPEN
consciousness - the point behind "all action and manifested creation"
- above your vivid dream of physical body life.
You are
constantly engaged in a form of meditation without knowledge. You allow your
attention to be drawn from one point to another on the scale of consciousness.
Most of us have little “will” to hold our attention at a single point for any
significant period or duration.
There are
no incorrect forms of meditation. Meditation is meditation and you become what
you meditate on. In other words, "Where your attention is, is where you
are."
Devotion
is a key component to meditation. Without devotion, you cannot succeed. You
must find something more valuable than your-self or your ego. Self or ego will
not immerse in SUMMUM.
When you
lose your ego, you find yourself. The goal of finding your spirit or inner
being seems very intangible when you do not know what you will find. The mental
exercise of directing and maintaining your attention at a fixed point has to be
balanced with some physical or moving exercise. This will bring you to a point
of equilibrium producing the complete person.
Live in Light!
EL
No comments:
Post a Comment