WHY MEDITATION?
How does it increase our awareness?
In everyday
life, as each of us lives in our “normal” state of consciousness,
our awareness is usually focused upon the particular thoughts, emotions
or perceptions we experience on the surface level of reality, whether
they are the experiences and perceptions we move through in our life
in the outer world, or the thoughts and feelings that we have in our
inner world. As we move through life, we perceive, think, act and feel
with the assistance of our “thinking mind”—the active
portion of our mind that deals with this surface level of reality, through
the use of thoughts, feelings, interpretations of perceptions, and actions.
Our awareness
is usually identified with, preoccupied with and attached to, whichever
of these particular activities we engage in through the use of this
“thinking mind.” Although all these particular components
of our life are important, when we remain identified with, and therefore
limited to, these surface activities—these surface appearances
of our deeper being—we are far less able to perceive and act from
a more fundamental level of greater awareness.
The tendency
of our “thinking mind” to remain preoccupied with the particulars
of life inhibits our ability to move to the level of pure consciousness
that is actually the source of all these particular states of mind.
In the practice of meditation we seek to free ourselves from this mental
“chatter” in which our “thinking mind” engages,
and instead seek connection to a deeper level of our being. We free
ourselves from the surface level of the mind, and by doing so, we make
it easier for ourselves to come into connection with a deeper spiritual
reality.
Meditation
is a process by which we seek to re-condition our conscious awareness,
so that we release our attachment to the surface level of reality and
instead allow the awareness to gravitate towards a state of pure awareness,
pure consciousness. As we meditate in the proper manner, the experience
of pure awareness itself moves more to the forefront, instead of a primary
identification with the highly active surface level of the mind.
The proper
practice of meditation therefore enables us to gain a better primary
connection to the greater reality that is the real source of everything
we experience. It is the primary connection to this greater reality
that provides us the greater awareness, perceptual abilities and powers
of consciousness that would ordinarily remain unavailable, should our
awareness remain only in touch with the “surface level”
of reality.
Our awareness,
freed from identification with the particular activities of the “thinking
mind,” is able to expand into a greater awareness of reality.
Our conscious awareness, free from the distractions and limitations
that result from preoccupation with the surface level of reality, is
also free to tap the powers in the field of pure consciousness that
would otherwise remain unnoticed and undeveloped—to cultivate
the conscious abilities that might ordinary remain undeveloped should
an identification with the excessive activity of the surface level of
the mind remain.
To gain
these potential benefits of meditation, by virtue of this reconditioning
of the awareness, it is necessary to engage in regular practice—usually
on a daily basis. Meditation does not provide all its benefits all at
once, but over time, as the practice itself re-conditions the awareness
of the meditator more towards the state of pure consciousness. In each
daily meditation session, the conscious awareness of the meditator is
encouraged, through the use of a certain technique, to free itself from
the surface level of the “thinking mind” and instead come
into greater contact with the field of pure consciousness.
Achieving
a state of pure awareness is therefore practiced, on a daily basis.
When this is done, the ability to contact the state of pure awareness
is present not only during each meditation session, but tends to “carry
over” to our entire life experience. Our ability to move into
a state of pure awareness during our meditation sessions does not become
unavailable when we stop meditating—our ability to contact this
state of pure consciousness manifests in, and tends to benefit our overall
life.
We acquire
the ability to contact and act from this deeper awareness at other times,
too, instead of being constantly bound by, and identified with, the
surface level of the mind. It may also be called upon during times when
such awareness and abilities are needed—during the practice of
healing, for example.
Because
meditation brings us into closer connection with the spiritual source
of life and health, the regular practice of meditation also tends to
refine and enhance the functioning of the body, mind and spirit—to
bring greater peace, effectiveness and harmony to all levels of the
being.
It is a
release of identification with, and subsequent gradual quiescence of,
this surface mental activity—the developed ability to access the
field of pure consciousness underneath the “busy” surface
level of the mind— that provides all these benefits.
There are
many forms of meditation, but to quiet the surface level of the mind
such that greater awareness and greater abilities may become manifest
is the goal of meditation in all its forms. Although the many different
kinds of meditation employ various techniques to work towards this desirable
goal, the overall process remains the same. read
more about Meditation